0 OPINION___ Page 4 Friday, October 6, 1989 The Michigan Dolly The U.S. and El Salvador: a portrait of state terror By the Latin America Solidarity Committee Does the U.S. bomb El Salvador's peasant population? It depends on what you mean. 74% of the $1.5 million dollars Washington sends there each day directly or indirectly goes to the Salvadoran military. U.S. dollars provide the planes allowing El Salvador's airforce to fly bombing missions. U.S. dollars provide the bombs. U.S. advisors train Salvadoran pilots on how to fly the planes, and they accompany them on bombing missions. But, literally, the U.S. does not do the bombing. El Salvadorans in El Salvador's airforce do. So one might well answer the question with which we began with a ringing "No!" It is this sort of specious logic which pervades Roberto Javier Frisancho's piece in yesterday's Daily, "Daily skews facts on El Salvador." Bristling with facts and figures, citations and quotations, Frisancho's piece exudes an air of responsible authority and reasoned consideration. But as we shall demonstrate, its numbers and citations willfully deceive-when they bother to consider the truth at all. Much of Frisancho's piece revolves around efforts to portray the FMLN- _Salvador's decade-old liberation movement-as a dissembling gang of human rights violators. He quotes Aryeh Neier, respected director of Americas Watch, testifying in June that FMLN human rights abuses were on a par with those of "uniformed members of the [Salvadoran] security forces." He cites testimony from Tutela Legal, El Salvador's Catholic human rights organization, indicting the FMLN for the murder of four peasants from Apopa last October. He points to the FMLN campaign to discredit El Salvador's mayors, eight of whom they have killed. He condemns the FMLN's use of land mines. It looks like a damning case. And it is built on sand. Let us begin with Tutela Legal, since this is where Americas Watch receives its El Salvador information. Frisancho does not mention that its human rights figures include innocent by-standers accidentally killed by FMLN car bombs directed against military installations. Nor does he mention that the FMLN has publicly acknowledged that using such bombs was a mistake, or that the FMLN has pledged to discontinue their use-and, for similar reasons, the use of land mines-despite the enormous impact of both upon the military (NACLA, Sept. 1989; in the last three months, according to Americas Watch, the only Salvadorans who have been killed by land mines have been victimized by government mines). And Frisancho never pauses to contemplate whether those accidental, albeit regrettable deaths are comparable with the intentional, cold-blooded assassinations carried out by El Salvador's military against those Salvadorans brave enough to stand up for their rights. Furthermore, according to Alison Calls, Americas Watch specialist on El Salvador, Tutela Legal is the more conservative of El Salvador's two human rights commissions. It refuses,, for example, to attribute numerous right-wing death-squad killings to "uniformed...forces" unless it has "incontrovertible" (more than circumstantial) evidence; this brings the statistical number of government killings down. Even so, according to Calls, more recent reports from Tutela Legal and from Americas Watch confirm what the Human Rights Commission of El Salvador (CDHES) has been saying all along: FMLN "atrocities"-accidents-pale before the Arena government's escalating pattern of arrests, disappearances, and murders. The government crack-down against unions is "unprecedented," according to Calls, who adds, "almost everyone who is being detained is being tortured" (phone interview; October 5, 1989 with the source Frisancho claimed we have never quoted and which he himself cites as responsible and informed). Moreover, Tutela Legal has made egregious mistakes-one of which, predictably enough, Frisancho cites to support his case. Their testimony notwithstanding, the Apopa victims' own relatives dispute Tutela Legal's testimony, claiming that the Army's First Infantry Brigade-not the FMLN-killed their relatives (El Sol, October 31, 1988). When the FMLN does kill non-military personnel, it always admits doing so, arguing that such cases involve collaborators or members of the army's intelligence network-vestiges of the infamous ORDEN death-squad network set up with U.S. assistance in the 1960s. El Salvador's mayors-in a country that has not had one fair election in the twentieth century-are part of that network. They are appointed by the military, not elected by the people, and even Washington has admitted that they are an integral component in the U.S. counterinsurgency program. The FMLN treats them as the members of an occupying. army that they are; they deserve no sympathy, and Frisancho has no right playing for any on their behalf. Frisancho's fall back position-once one finishes refuting his bogus litany of human rights abuses-concerns the FMLN's purported lack of support in El Salvador. He cites a poll conducted by the Jesuit-run University of Central America (UCA) which claims that only 6% of the population supports the FMLN. And he argues that earlier Daily editorials had no right to imply that the 59 organizations affiliated with the independent Permanent Committee of the National Debate for Peace in El Salvador support the FMLN. Again, Frisancho substitutes half truth for the real truth-when he bothers with getting his numbers straight at all. A feature on the UCA's polls in the most recent bulletin from the North American Congress on Latin America-again, a source Frisancho himseif quotes-states that 30% of the Salvadoran population has adopted "radicalized" politics, and argues that the number would be significantly higher were it not for the "pervasive fear remaining among most of the population from the repression of the early 1980s." Were it not for this repression-through which the government has already murdered over seventy thousand Salvadorans- people might answer a stranger's questions about who she or he supports a bit differently. Frisancho conveniently forgets to mention this repression-along with UCA Vice-Rector Ignacio Martin-Baro's willingness to consider that, despite the repression, the FMLN might well command the sympathy of the majority of all Salvadorans. 6 a As for the Permanent Committee, yes, it is independent. Which is not to say, as Frisancho implies, that it is neutral. The Committee has met with consistent governmental harassment, largely because it has endorsed both the FMLN's January and September proposals as the firmest available basis on which to conduct peace negotiations. Most of its membership organizations, including its largest, the National Union of Salvadoran Workers (UNTS), are pro-FMLN, although- because of the repression-they are circumspect about saying so. It is Frisancho's systematic disregard for this repression-and who conducts it- that we find especially disturbing. Like the group of which he is President, which calls itself a coalition for democracy even as it actively works to suppress anything remotely resembling the same, Frisancho's piece is a maze of doublespeak denying the U.S.-supported Salvadoran government's crimes against its own people. LASC opposes U.S. intervention in Latin America and meets Wednesdays, at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan Union. All are wel- come. Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. C, No. 22 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. Recycle the red tape AS USUAL, the University is wasting programs. Many of the University li- the resources it has at hand. While the braries voluntarily recycle old newspa- Ann Arbor City Council considers per and other waste products through mandatory recycling ordinances with their own buildings or the fines for those who do not comply, the Undergraduate Library. University timidly follows the city's Although these efforts have been a ead by phasing in a voluntary recy- commendable response to University cling program over the next two years. inaction, they have not been compre- -In light of the economic and environ- hensive enough. mental benefits of recycling, the In the Graduate Library, for example, University's virtual inaction is unac- recycling has been done out of in- - eeptable. dividual department's concerns, not Currently the United States is the because of University policy - and ' 4orld's largest consumer of paper although office paper is recycled, stu- 'products and the paper industry is dent paper waste is not. among the largest users of fuel oil in As students and members of the "America. Voluntarily recycling efforts community continue to call for a com- ilready save approximately 200 million prehensive waste management pro- trees each year. The practice has also gram, the University, the greatest cre- been economically efficient because the ator of waste in Ann Arbor, essentially actual production of recycled goods is stands mute in its own refuse. less costly than making finished prod- Cornell University in Ithaca, New ucts from raw materials that require York has recycling facilities for up to .complex production techniques. one half its total waste. While this is While Ann Arbor residents have al- not perfect, it is far superior to the ready been active in voluntary recycling skeletal program that is here. for the past 18 years, the University Mandatory recycling has proven to has just begun to deal with the waste it be most effective in programs instituted creates. around the world, and yet the In 1987 students first approached University refuses to take a leadership housing officials with a plan for a role in solving the dilemma. The im- University administered recycling pro- plementation of the voluntary program gram. In response a recycling coalition is a beginning, however the adminis- of the Housing Administration, tration has yet to commit the resources Recycle UM, the Residence Hall needed for the mandatory recycling of Association, the School of Natural its own red tape. Resources, and Recycle Ann Arbor set up the Housing Division and Plant Not only does the University have Department Solid Waste Management the responsibility of providing students Task Force. with an education which enables them Last January this task force began to to address society's needs, but the implement a voluntary recycling pro- University must as well address those gram. This year all the dormitories ex- needs. Clearly, environmental conser- cept Oxford, Bates, Fletcher, and mar- vation is a societal concern and clearly, ried housing units the task force asks the University is flouting its responsi- students to separate newsprint and bility. cardboard. Wrongly students only, and The University must take a leading riot the University as an institution - role to teach and implement environ- bear the burden of implementing this mental conservation policies. If program. Duderstadt s efforts to lead the Until this year, the University has University into the 21st century are to had no type of comprehensive waste have any meaning at all, the University management program. Previously, in- must, at the very least, institute a dividual buildings on campus have mandatory recycling program, a pro- been left to fend for themselves. gram for which the University, and not Dormitories such as East Quad and only a few concerned students are ac- South Quad implemented student-run countable. A By Camille Cola Today.in the U.S. won most half of the labor women will make up 51 workers. But the ideolo, and of women's "natural makes women's labor o despite its prevalence, a marginal. Two recent fed couldn't make this pointn Last week, the U.S. C for the Seventh Circuit i overwhelmingly (7 to 4) Milwaukee automobileI against the women emp cused Johnson Control I crimination. According to the cou may bar all fertile women all women of childbearin of whether or not they from factory jobs which risk to an unborn child. Confirming the misog women are primarily - reproductive beings, th women their rights as we and citizens. Exploitativ patronizing judges "prot out of the good jobs" (K National Organization fo 10/3/89). Another federal judg California handed down1 decision this past Wednes handmaid's The fact that the judge in this case - by r tOSti Marilyn Hall Patel - was formerly a W lawyer for the National Organization for 59 t men compose al- Women makes this decision even more man force. By 1990 heinous than the previous one. wor percent of U.S. Filed by the California State fami gy of femininity Employees' Association on behalf of coup " role as mothers 60,000 or more past and present face utside the home, secretaries, clerks, nurses and other female exan ppear as if it is state workers in jobs held predominantly sent eral court rulings by women, this potentially ground- wor more clearly. breaking comparable worth suit won ourt of Appeals convincingly argued that such jobs were - s n Chicago voted underpaid. wor in support of a Judge Patel ruled in favor of the state won batteries factory not because she questioned the validity of ployees who ac- the wage disparity. For the figures are R nc. of sexist dis- indisputable; female state workers make "Am approximately $200 to $300 less per U.S. irt, an employer month than their male counterparts. Patel wish n - this includes ruled against the union because it did not won g age, regardless prove "that the state selected particular pay ism are pregnant - policies because of any alleged mar pose a potential discriminatory effects upon women state hope employees" (NYT 10/5/89). raci gynist belief that In other words, -not only must the union one if not solely - prove the existence of discrimination, it gend e ruling denies must also show that such discrimination dep orkers, taxpayers was intentional. A 1985 ruling by the won e employers and U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth soci ect women right Circuit, written by Judge Anthony M. ourc im Gandy of the Kennedy, currently serving on the U.S. r Women, NYT, Supreme Court, argued that states may rely solely on market rates when setting ,e in the state of salaries even though market rates for jobs C an equally sexist predominantly held by women are consis- stu day, October 4th. tently below those for jobs held primarily Sol tale men. Vomen workers on average earn only o 63 cents for every dollar earned by a . The sexist assumption that women k not to support themselves and their ilies, but simply for "pin" money, ac-': nts for many of the'inequities women in the labor market. The above two mples, rather than exceptional, repre- the situation faced by most women kers in the U.S. today. This includes men who work in non-traditional jobs uch as factory labor - and those who k in fields traditionally reserved for men. ather than accept the rhetoric of the , nerican dream," which pretends that all workers can do and be whatever they h, if only they try hard enough, men must confront and oppose the sex- institutionalized by both the U.S. ket and the court system. Our sole e lies in building a multi-issue, multi- al and cross-class women's movement, that works in coalition with mixed der groups but which maintains an in- endent identity, one which demands men's right to participate fully in our ety, to have control over our bodies, employment and our lives. amille Colatosti is a graduate dent in English and a member of idarity. Asi Brazil confronts L By Sharon P. Holland Activists who advocate to stop the vio- lence against women in this country are constantly looking for examples of cen- tralized programs that would provide quick, efficient aid to women and children who are survivors of abusive relation- ships. Just south of us, feminists in Brazil have devised a space for women who are survivors of battering, rape and assault to seek police intervention, medical care and counselling. After the widespread protest of 1980 where Brazilians were calling for democracy, direct elections, and an end to rampant police brutality, feminists there united the country around the issue of violence. While the women's movement in Brazil in the early '80's struggled to bridge the gap between poor women and working women in that country where the majority of women are poor, the Delegacias have served to unite women in Sao Paulo. As the police stations gained popularity and conservative men in the legislature began to back down from claims that women did not deserve "special treatment", women all over Brazil began to organize together to have similar stations in their states. At the Sao Paulo station alone, over 80% of the complaints brought against as- sailants are due to domestic violence, the most frequent crime reported is rape, fol- lowed by attempted rape, verbal harass- ment and finally, neglect via abandon- iattering1 the television set) -- the media in Sao Paulo has responded by including nightly coverage of police station activity so that the public is informed about violence against women on a consistent basis. Contrary to the experience of counsel- lors here that women are unable to leave battering relationships because of eco- nomic reasons, Sao Paulo figures show that half of the women who come to the. stations have their own incomes. But, so- cial workers in Brazil also attribute this difference to traditional relationships be- tween men and women which are linked to cultural, rather than socio-economic causes. Brazilian feminists still have a long way, to go in confronting both the legal system? one .r. r #nlin.,.1..A D......;1:.... - -I