By Bill Van Auken
27 September 2005
The fatal September 23 shooting of Puerto Rican nationalist leader
Filiberto Ojeda Rios represents an act of state terror and cold-blooded
murder by the US government. It is one more proof that in the name of a
"global war on terrorism," Washington has arrogated to itself the right
to conduct political assassinations and act as judge, jury and
executioner against opponents of US policies and interests.
Aged 72, Ojeda Rios was the leader of the Boricua Popular Army, also
known as the Macheteros, a group that advocated independence for Puerto
Rico. He was wanted on charges that he had participated in the planning
of a 1983 Wells Fargo armored car robbery in Hartford, Connecticut, in
which $7.1 million was taken. A fugitive for 15 years since fleeing
house arrest in 1990, he was sentenced in absentia to 55 years in jail.
Ojeda Rios was alone with his wife in their home in the rural
southwestern Puerto Rican municipality of Hormigueros, near the city of
Mayagez, when scores of FBI agents stormed his property, unleashing a
rain of bullets. According to reports, at least 100 armed agents were
involved, backed by helicopters and a squad of military sharpshooters
brought to the island from Virginia.
The nationalist leader was struck by a single bullet from a
sharpshooters high-powered rifle. While he suffered no wound to any
vital organ, he was left to bleed to death on the floor of his home as
FBI agents refused to allow Puerto Rican authorities and emergency
medical teams anywhere near the house, maintaining a militarized
perimeter for 24 hours.
Later, an FBI spokesman claimed that the agents who had surrounded the
house and shot Ojeda Rios feared that the house could be wired with
explosives and were waiting for reinforcements to fly in from the US.
Testimony from his wife and a neighbor, as well as the results of an
autopsy, exposed as lies the FBI's version of events. US authorities
had claimed that federal agents had come to arrest Ojeda Rios, opening
fire only after he had fired on them.
In a press conference Monday, however, the nationalist leader's wife,
Elma Beatriz Rosado Barbosa, testified, "On Friday, September 23, in
the afternoon hours, our house was surrounded. Armed men penetrated our
property and took our house by assault, hitting it in a brutal and
terrible manner, firing with heavy weapons against the front wall of
our residence."
Hector Reyes, whose house is approximately 300 feet from that of Ojeda
Rios, confirmed this account, saying that the US assault team began
firing on the house as soon as the helicopters arrived on the scene.
"The first shots were very powerful, not from a little revolver like
they say he had," said Reyes.
The killing sparked spontaneous demonstrations throughout the island
and statements of condemnation by leaders of virtually every political
tendency, from pro-independence to the supporters of the island's
status as a US "commonwealth" and those advocating US statehood.
Even the territory's Governor Anibal Acevedo Vila, whose Popular
Democratic Party supports the island's current colonial status, found
himself compelled to declare his "deep indignation" and demand an
explanation from the FBI for the killing of Ojeda. "As governor, I make
an energetic demand to the federal authorities to end the silence that
they have maintained in relation to these events," he said.
Neither the governor nor the Puerto Rican police and local prosecutors
were given any advance notice that the FBI was about to mount a
military operation on the island. They first learned of the siege from
news reports and received no official report from the FBI until nearly
a full day later. An FBI spokesman claimed that the silence owed to the
fact that the operation was "developing" and the agency feared
endangering its agents.
The head of the Catholic Church in Puerto Rico, Monsignor Roberto
Gonzalez Nieves, also condemned the killing, warning that it would
"continue the cycle of violence."
"They are operating as if they were in hostile territory, like Iraq or
Afghanistan," said Radio Isla political commentator Ignacio Rivera.
"It has
political consequences," added Rivera, a supporter of statehood for
Puerto Rico. "They achieved their military objective, but the political
side was absurd."
The half-hearted protests from the island's establishment were a timid
reflection of the popular outrage the killing has provoked throughout
Puerto Rico.
There were demands on the island for the declaration of a day of
national mourning for Ojeda. The University of Puerto Rico at Ro
Piedras, the island's largest campus with 23,000 students, announced
that students would be excused from classes and university employees
given the day off to attend the nationalist leader's funeral Tuesday.
In a press release, the university's president, Gladys Escalona de
Motta, stated, "I call on the university community, in an exercise of
its free expression, to set a high example in these moments when the
nation demands clarity." She added, "Puerto Rico needs to take stock of
its convictions to confront the feelings that have overcome the
country."
The FBI chose as the day to carry out the assassination the 137th
anniversary of the "Grito de Lares," the first revolt for Puerto Rican
independence from Spain. The day is celebrated each year as a
commemoration of the Puerto Rican national struggle against colonialism.
It appears likely that the day was chosen based on the belief that
Ojeda Rios would more likely be alone, as his sympathizers and
supporters would be marking the day with public meetings and
demonstrations. The Puerto Rican nationalist leader recorded messages
that were read out in Lares every year.
Ironically, his last
message was broadcast even as federal agents were moving in to kill him.
Many, however, saw the choice of the day as a political statement by
Washington of impunity and contempt for the sentiments of the Puerto
Rican people.
An autopsy performed at the San Juan Institute of Forensic Sciences
confirmed the sadistic character of the FBI's assassination of Ojeda
Rios.
It showed that he
suffered a single bullet wound entering beneath his collarbone and
exiting his back.
"He did not die instantaneously," said Doctor Hector Pesquera, who
participated in the autopsy. "What I saw as a doctor was that they let
him bleed to death.... In my opinion, there was enough time, a
considerable time in which he was wounded and he did not receive the
aid that could have saved his life."
Puerto Rico's Justice Secretary, Roberto Sanchez Ramos, concurred with
this assessment, stating, "The information we have is that if Mr. Ojeda
had received immediate medical attention after being shot, he would
have survived."
Ojeda Rios had been the subject of a similar FBI raid involving
helicopters and scores of agents in 1985, when he was arrested in
connection with the Wells Fargo robbery. He was subsequently jailed and
tried for attempted murder for shooting and wounding one of the FBI
agents during the arrest. A federal jury in San Juan, however, found
him not guilty, its members accepting his argument that he had acted in
self-defense against the government's aggression.
The FBI and other US authorities never forgave nor forgot this
humiliation. Now they have taken advantage of changed political
conditions in the US, characterized by the "global war on terrorism"
and the USA Patriot Act, to murder him. Clearly, if the agency had
wanted to arrest a 72-year-old man, accompanied only by his wife, they
could have taken him alive.
The assassination of Ojeda is a case of Washington deploying a death
squad on what it claims as its own territory. This brutal killing
serves as a warning of the methods the US government is prepared to use
to suppress political opposition within the US itself.
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/sep2005/puer-s27.shtml