Opinion Page 6 Thursday, May 27, 1982 The Michigan Daily El Salvador abandons reform By Kent Redding El Salvador's recent elections, ter- med by many as a slap in the face to the leftist opposition there, may yet turn out to be the biggest aid the rebels could hope to receive. The Central American nation's .rightwing parties captured a majority , in the March 28 elections, in spite of the boycott by leftists who are fighting Salvadoran government forces. Now, that majority in the Constituent Assembly has begun to do what many Salvadoran peasants and U.S. officials feared. After barely a month in session, the legislature has suspended much of that country's land reform programs. AT STAKE, AS a result of the changes, is the support of the large peasant population in El Salvador that may shift its allegiance to the small, but fierce, force of leftist rebels fighting the government. Just as important is the continuing support of the United States in the form of both economic and military aid. The U.S. government is bound by Congress to satisfactorily cer- tify that El Salvador is following through with land reforms and has im- proved on its human rights record: The land reforms, hailed by President Reagan as "unprecedented," now seem all but dead. The land program that was supposed to distribute the farmland more equitably among rich landowners and peasants has been suspended for one crop year. That does not sound like a long time, but in the case of sugar cane one crop equals four years. Many suspect that the suspension, rather than complete scrapping, of the program was designed to allow aid to continue by placating the U.S. Congress, while the assembly has no intentions of ever renewing reforms. U.S. state department officials have said they received a pledge from the Salvadoran assembly that reforms will be carried out, including the land-to- the-tiller program that will allow nearly 150,000 peasants to apply for, and eventually own, up to 17 acres of land they currently have been sharecropping. Pledges, however, are no substitute for deeds and for now the peasants will not receive the land. PART OF THE blame for the gover- nment reneging on the reforms set by the previous regime has to be leveled at the Reagan administration. U.S. of- ficials did not make it clear that the United States could not and would not support a government that has retreated from more equitable land reform. Now that state department has been forced into an observer's role to ensure the actual implementation of the reforms. Already, however, the administration has blinded itself to program abuses by large landowners. Nearly 10,000 peasant families have been evicted from land they were renting since the reforms have been effectively anulled by the assembly, according to a Salvadoran union and peasant organization. In addition, thousands more reportedly have received eviction notices and the current government is doing nothing to stop the evictions. Nevertheless, the U.S. Congress is duty bound to use a magnifying glass where the administration has chosen blinders when it surveys Salvadoran compliance with the conditions set for continued aid. Sen. Charles Percy (R- Ill.) has vowed that "not one cent of funds shall go to the government of El Salvador" unless the nation follows through on its land reform programs. Now only 2 percent of the population of the country controls over 60 percent of the country's arable land. If the Salvadoran government insists upon maintaining that miserable status quo, the United States has no right to inter- fere with their decision. At the same time, however, the United States need not give its support to a government that insists upon driving landless peasants into the arms of the leftist rebels and the country into the throes of an even bloodier civil war. Redding is the Daily Opinion Page editor. The Michigan Daily Vol. XCII, No. 17-S Ninety-two Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by student,. at the University of M ichigan The es-man DRESIDENT REAGAN has lashed out at 5 his opponents on Capitol Hill again, calling them the "advocates of 'no.' "They offer the politics of no growth, no take- home pay' no neighborhood schools, no incen- tives to work," he said. Well if the Democrats are advocates of "no," does that make the president a yes-man? Perhaps. He certainly didn't say "no" to the Pentagon, but handed them a big fat check for over a trillion dollars good for five years. And he said "yes" to big corporations and wealthy individuals when he gave them a smile and billions of dollars in tax credits. He even said "yes" to the needs of the poor people in this country-but they have to wait until it trickles down. The biggest presidential "yes" has been saved to push the economy out of its recessionary doldrums. But like those stubborn Democrats in Washington, the economy is still saying "no! Editorials appearing on the left side of the page beneath The Michigan Daily logo represent a majority opinion of the Daily's staff. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Police 'harass' Sparticists To the Daily: The Ann Arbor police and the University administration are carrying out a witchhunt against the Spartacist League and Spar- tacus Youth League, the initiators of the March 20 mobilization which successfully stopped the Nazis from bringing their program of race terror and genocide to Ann Arbor. In a concerted campaign to harass, intimidate and silence socialists, city cops have been hounding us on campus and in downtown areas. To date among other incident, SL and SYL sup- porters have been issued five summons for the "crime" of distributing socialist literature. They are trying to gag u because we stopped the Nazis. The mayor and his pals organized a diversionary rally to "ignore the Nazis", that is, turn Ann Arbor over to them, are wit- chunting us for that. They no doubt worry that this victory will lead to other challenges to the decrepit status quo - the grin- ding economic misery and unem- ployment, Reagan and Haig's an- ti-Soviet war lust in Central America, the "rollbacks" of even minimal gains for women, youth, black people, and other "WE'RE IN THE TROUGH OF THIS RECESSIOI - ;1 4> IA. P Y _ cc)1982 minorities. Such is well founded. And they particularly don't like the fact that this important demonstration was led by reds. So we get cop harassment and legal persecution. It's begun with us, but it won't stop with us if allowed to continue. For this reason it is particularly shameful that the so-called "socialists" like the Revolutionary Workers League and others, despairing of the revolutionary capacity of the working class and still trying to straddle the nonexistent middle ground between the two planned actions, thus conciliating the liberals, have issued reams of slander sheets against us, egging on the witchunt. The liberals have raised a hue and cry about civil liberties for the Nazis, with the Daily and Ann Arbor News bemoaning "mob violence" and supposed "manipulation" by radicals. But March 20 was not about preven- ting civil rights, but stopping murderers before they could kill. Even according to Ann Arbor city statutes, these summons are illegal. They certainly violate our elementary democratic rights of free speech. We intend to vigorously defend our rights to distribute our literature and discuss our ideas. We demand that the harassments cease! We demand that all charges against SL and SYL supporters should be dropped! -Heather Nolan Spartacus Youth League May 16, 1982