OPINION Page 4 Friday, November 3, 1989 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. C, No. 43 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 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. Lexington woman speaks out on: Women Political Prisoners Nicaraguan THE NICARAGUAN government has, as it did in 1984, agreed to international supervision for its general elections in February, 1990. Former U.S. Attorney General Elliot Richardson, the U.N. observer in Nicaragua, praised the scrupulous fairness with which the elections were organized. In fact, the only threat to fairness has come from the U.S. sponsored contras, who - during the month pf October alone - closed down more than 50 voter regis- tration centers, preventing thousands from registering to vote (NYT 11/2/89). The success of the Sandinistas and the fairness of the Nicaraguan electoral process have scared Ortega's enemies. Doubting the potential of the opposition to win in a free election, the Bush Administration has used every stratagem in its arsenal to undermine the elections it claims to believe in so strongly. Economic muscle is not the only tool wielded by the Bush administration in their campaign to "de-democratize" Nicaragua. Congressional leaders an- nounced Friday they would continue a $48 million aid package approved for contra rebels this April. Although this so-called humanitarian aid cannot be di- rectly spent on weapons, it frees up other money for this purpose. Contra patrols striking from across the border in Honduras have caused 3,700 deaths during the ceasefire which has been in effect these past 19 months. Much of this activity has been aimed at disrupt- ing the process of voter registration, as evidenced by the two Sandinista politi- cal organizers murdered October 25th and the 19 reservists ambushed and killed on their way to register October :21st. :Significantly; the ceasefire was initi- ,ated largely to protect the integrity of the elections. Because contra activity continues nearly unchecked - the killing of military personnel and civil- ians associated with the Sandinistas is evidence of this - contra rebels have demonstrated that they are trying to sti- fle the open debate necessary for the electorate to make an informed deci- sion. Disrupting elections is a standard guerrilla tactic; but in sponsoring such activity, the United States government has discredited its entire rationale for involvement in the region. Our so- called struggle for democracy has be- Some nothing more than a simple struggle for power. Democracy. Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has promised the Nicaraguan people, the Central American presidents, and the entire international community that his country will hold free, fair and democratic elections on Feb. 25, 1990. Regrettably, increased military activity by the contras aimed at thwarting his democratic efforts leaves him little choice but to end the unilateral ceasefire in order to protect his people. In yes- terday's New York Times , Ortega ex- plains this decision: "We do not con- sider it an acceptable ceasefire when we cease and the contras fire. For peace to be achieved, the war itself must be stopped. There is no other way to end the war than to start immediately the demobilization of the contras" (NYT 11/2/89). The most effective way to stop contra attacks and insure democratic elections is to fully implement the Tela Accords, which called for the demobilization and disarmament of the contras by Dec. 5. President Bush's refusal to adhere to the agreements of Central American presidents make his pronouncements about fairness and democratic process appear questionable at best. Already, the reluctant decision of Ortega to respond to contra attacks has been greeted with a storm of highly charged anti-Sandinista rhetoric from the Bush Administration and the U.S. media. White House spokesperson Marlin Fitzwater called the threat of a November 1 offensive by the Sandin- istas "an incredible affront to the democratic principles that the Latin American countries are here to cele- brate." On Ortega's suggestion that he would cancel the offensive if the U.S. followed through on its agreement to have the contras disarmed by December 5th, Fitzwater was strangely silent. Bush's expressed outrage at Ortega's decision to end the ceasefire agreed to in Sapoa March 1988 rings false when one considers how blatantly his contra proxies have violated it during these past few months. The contras have no intention of dis- arming by the December 5th deadline. Apparently, they will continue to rav- age the countryside and disrupt legiti- mate political activity until the elections next February. It is equally clear that President Ortega has no choice but to use military force to guarantee contra terrorism will not make a shambles of the democratic society he and so many others fought 12 years to build. By Susan Rosenberg Picture an underground basement con- taining 16 cells painted all white with no natural light. Wire mesh covering all win- dows making a view out impossible. Eleven large rotating surveillance cameras. Electronic gates controlled from a com- mand center in another building. Constant surveillance and controlled movement su- pervised by specially trained prison guards. Infrequent family visits. Two ten minute phone calls a week that are recorded, tran- scribed, analyzed and forwarded to other law enforcement agencies for analysis. Sexual intimidation and constant harass- ment by male guards. Never more than five women in this place. A psychological prison (torture center) in Uruguay? A scene from the film "A Clockwork Or- ange?" NO! The U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) High Security Unit (HSU) at the women's federal correctional institu- tion in Lexington, Kentucky, which opened in October 1986. The HSU was officially shut down on August 15, 1988. During the almost two years it was operational, it held three women political prisoners: Alejandrina Torres (a Puerto Rican Independentista and Prisoner of War); Silvia Baraldini (an Ital- ian national convicted of participating in the 1979 prison liberation of Black Libera- tion Army member Assata Shakur); and myself, Susan Rosenberg (a north ameri- can convicted of weapons possession). The HSU symbolizes the U.S. govern- ment's hypocrisy: while it claimed that it had no political prisoners in its prisons, the HSU was the first prison facility to be used explicitly for this purpose. It was the subject of militant opposition initiated by the Puerto Rican Independence Movement that included groups ranging from church to radical women to lesbian activists. The HSU was condemned by Amnesty Interna- tional as "small group isolation", an in- ternationally recognized form of psycho- logical torture - and it was closed offi- cially by a court ruling from the legal Broaden By Solidarity challenge in Baraldini v. Thornburgh. Judge Barrington Parker concluded in his decision, "It is one thing to place persons under greater security because they have escape histories and pose special risks to our correctional institutions. But consign- ing anyone to a high security unit for past political associations they will never shed unless forced to renounce them is a dan- gerous mission for this country's prison system to continue." On September 8, 1989, the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., over- turned Judge Parker's decision. The Appeals court held that the gov- ernment is free to use the political beliefs and associations of prisoners as a basis for treating us more harshly and placing us under maximum security conditions. Fur- thermore, their ruling means that no court can question or dispute the prison's deci- sions even if those decisions explicitly in- volve the prisoner's politics. This legal precedent gives official sanc- tion to the BOP to place political prison- ers into control units. A control unit is a prison block within a prison that isolates prisoners. There is no movement in the units, and they are designed to break the prisoner through sensory deprivation and control. The control unit is the U.S. equivalent of the West German or British "dead wings" or "white cells." The Appeals court ruling will also effect Marion penitentiary for men, where pris- oners have been locked in their cells 23 hours a day for over five years. Marion has also been condemned by Amnesty Interna- tional, and it is also used as a control unit for political prisoners and prisoners of war. While Marion is supposedly a pun- ishment facility, a growing number of po- litical prisoners have been sent there di- rectly from trial. The new Lexington legal decision al- lows the BOP to build more control units and to carry out this "mission" against the government's political opposition. All the government has to do is label someone a "terrorist" or a "security risk" and they can be subjected to repressive conditions and human rights violations. . The BOP never acknowledged the con-. demnation of the conditions at the HSU.: They never complied with the original court order enjoining them to transfer the women held at the HSU. Instead, they. built a new "maximum security" unit for women inside the men's federal prison in Marianna, Florida. The "mission" of the BOP at Lexington will be carried on in a slightly more palatable form at Marianna. This "mission" is one part of the overall program of the BOP to increase regimenta- tion, control and repression against all women in prison. Since 1990, a growing number of women have been arrested and given long sentences for political actions against the government. Now that the transfer of po- litical prisoners to Marianna has been ap- proved by the Appeals court decision, it is just a matter of time before some, if not all, are sent there. The U.S. government continues to deny that there are political prisoners in its jails - just as it denies that there are deep social problems within our society. Yet the same government that hopes to make it a crime against the state for women to control our own bodies is also trying hard to destroy women political prisoners, our commitments and identities. We will continue to resist. Your sup- port will make a critical difference. Susan Rosenberg is serving a 58 year sen- tence for the possession of explosives. She is a Doctor of Acupuncture who was a pioneer in the use of traditional Chinese medicine to treat drug addiction. Write to her as follows: Susan Rosenberg; #233412 1901 D Street, SE, Washington, D.C. 20003. The political campaign that was crucial in bringing the pressure to close the IISU is needed again. For more information contact the Washington Area Committee for Political Prisoners' Rights, P.O. Box 28191, Washington, D.C. 20038; or Freedom Now! Campaign,,,, for Amnesty and human Rights for Polit- ical Prisoners in the United States, 5249 N. Kenmore, Chicago, Illinois 60640. Throw away the locks EIGHTEEN YEARS ago the New York State Police stormed Attica prison. Fir- ing dum-dum bullets and tear gas canisters at prisoners armed with tableware, the police killed 29 and maimed hundreds. Last week, at the close of an extraor- dinary process of litigation, the sur- vivors of the uprising and the victims' families were awarded $1.3 million in damages. The next day, the Attica bloodbath was re-enacted at the state prison in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. 118 men - 12 guards, firefighters, and police, and 106 prisoners - were wounded. The Camp Hill prisoners rose up after the warden told them that their families could not bring them food when they visited. That was the im- mediate cause, but there were lingering complaints of inadequate health care, beatings by guards, and overcrowding. Camp Hill was filled to 48 percent over capacity - better than the 60 percent average in the nation's 58 Federal pris- ons. Overcrowding is the problem. But in the present terms of the debate about what to do about it, a solution will not be found. On Tuesday, the Detroit Free v Press ran a story with the headline "Many inmates, too few cells." Had they stopped to consider that there might be "too many inmates," they would have gone a long way towards addressing the crisis. Statistics show that the number of prisoners has little to do with crime rates: judges return more guilty verdicts and longer sentences when they know that convicts will have somewhere to go. All jails that get built will get filled. So the solution to overcrowding, surprising as may it may seem, is to stop building new prisons. Today no one will claim that prisons can rehabili- tate criminals. Prisons are holding pens, packing men and women in cir- cumstances so stifling and so inhumane that they feel they have no other re- course than to take over, at the risk of their own lives. Fighting alone, prisoners can never win. Michigan will spend $1 billion on prison construction this year. It is in everyone's interest to oppose this, and to demand that prisoners be released to relieve the overcrowding that exists now. If the spending does not stop, there will be more Atticas, and more Camp Hills. Today, pro-choice activists must erode the notion that abortion is a dirty little se- cret. The termination of a pregnancy can be a positive choice, one that enables women to control their reproduction and their lives. If abortion becomes illegal once again in the U.S., women will not stop having abortions, but many, and especially work- ing-class and poor women, will stop hav- ing safe abortions. Before legalization, 49 per cent of all pregnancy related deaths in New York were due to illegal abortions. Fifty per cent of these women were Black, and 44 per cent were Puerto Rican (Coalition of women of color for reproduc- tive health memorandum 2/26/89). Today, abortion remains one of the safest of all medical procedures. When performed within the first trimester of pregnancy - and over 93 per cent of all abortions are - chance of death stands at only one out of 400,000 (Against the Cur- rent 7-8/89). Nevertheless, we must realize that the preservation of Roe v. Wade - the 1973 Supreme Court decision which effectively legalized abortion in the U.S. - is not in itself enough to guarantee women reproductive choice. A critical look at Roe v. Wade Not the unconditional affirmation of feminist principles that many women have assumed it to be, Roe v. Wade instead ex- ists as a compromise between a woman's right to choose abortion and the state's right to interfere with that choice. The de- cision was not based on a woman's right to control her own body and to make the moral choices that responsibility entails. Rather, the Supreme Court denounced the principle that "the woman's right is abso- lute and that she is entitled to terminate h& pregnancy at whatever time, in what- ever way, and for whatever reason she alone chooses." As the Court insisted, "With this we do not agree" (410 U.S. 113, emphasis added). The Roe decision itself provides open- ings for anti-choice activists. As Justice Blackmun, the author of the majority deci- sion, phrased it: [I]t is reasonable and ap- Abortion propriate for a State to decide that at some point in time another interest, that of health of the mother or that of potential human life, becomes significantly in- volved. The woman's right to privacy is no longer sole and any right of privacy she possesses must be measured accordingly (410 U.S. 113). Sterilization abuse and abortion funding Immediately following Roe, anti-choice forces began mobilizing. The National Conference of Catholic Bishops initiated grassroots "Right-to-Life" groups. And conservative politicians passed anti-choice bills. A 1973 amendment to the Foreign Aid Bill, still in effect today,-specified that no U.S. government money could be used abroad for abortion devices or counseling. This amendment immediately aroused fem- inist concern that sterilization would re- place abortion as the "birth control method of last resort," and that sterilization abuse would increase (Village Voice 3/1 1- 17/81). Today, one-quarter of all Native-Ameri- can women have been sterilized, often without their knowledge and certainly without their consent. Afro-American women are twice as likely to be sterilized as white women. Medicaid continues to fund sterilization, but only 13 states and Washington, D.C. currently allow medi- caid abortions. By 1975, both Republican President Gerald Ford and Democratic can- didate and soon-to-be President Jimmy Carter opposed medicaid funded abortions. The 1977 Hyde Amendment to the an- nual appropriations bill for the Depart- ment of Health and Human Services pro- vided the precedent the 1989 Supreme Court needed in order to prohibit public hospitals and their employees from per- forming abortions. The majority decisions of the important federal cases which tested the constitutionality of the Hyde Amend- ment -- Beal v. Doe (432 U.S. 438 1977), Maher v. Roe (432 U.S. 464 1977), Harris v. McRae (448 U.S. 297 1980), and Williams v. Zbaraz (448 U.S. 358 1980) - all concluded that states were not required to fund even medically necessary abortions. Struggle The overturning of the Hyde Amend- ment may very well have transformed the healthcare industry in the U.S. By arguin that the poor have a right to medical treatment they cannot afford, those in fa- vor of maintaining medicaid funded abor- tions implied the need for a nationalized healthcare program. But the Supreme Court insisted that medical care was not a right to which the poor were entitled; in- stead, the court presented medical care as a gift from the government to the impover, ished. "[T]he Hyde Amendment leaves an indigent woman with at least the samo range of choice in deciding whether to ob- tain a medically necessary abortion as she would if congress had chosen to subsidize no health care cost 'at all" (Harris v. McRae 448 U.S. 297 1980). What's Next for the Abortion Movement The current feminist mobilization, against the threat to legal abortion is ex- citing. At the same time, however, the fact that the women's movement did not respond in full force when federal funding for medicaid abortions was eroded suggests that the feminist movement must be more sensitive than it's been in the past to the needs of poor and working-class women. If we hope to build a multi-issued, broad based movement, we must fight to provide women control over the material circum- stances of their lives. This means demand ing not only the legal right to abortion" but guaranteed access to abortion as well. To insure that every woman is econom ically and truly free to raise children either by herself, with a male partner, or with another woman, we must abolish the ster- ilization abuse and economic exploitation - low wages, inadequate childcare and in- sufficient parental leave options - that prevent women from exercising their right to bear children. Women who opt for abord tion out of economic necessity clearly do not have the right to choose how they want to live their lives. And it is in broad- ening the definition of choice that abor- tion rights activists face our biggest chal lenge. Solidarity is an independent non-sectarian socialist organization. 0