Take Action Today: Salvadoran Military Officers Installed in Top Security Posts Violating the Peace
Friday, January 27 2012 @ 11:17 AM In a major cabinet shakeup, El Salvador's President Mauricio Funes has effectively removed all high-ranking members of his public security cabinet who are linked to the leftist Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN). Their replacements, including several high-ranking military officers, indicate a disturbing trend toward the militarization of El Salvador's public security force, which has remained a civilian agency since the signing of the 1992 Peace Accords twenty years ago. Many of the officers assuming leadership of these "civilian" security posts were trained by the US at the infamous combat training facility for Latin American military, the School of the Americas (SOA), in Ft. Benning, Georgia. ¡Ni un paso atrás en la lucha para la libertad y los derechos del pueblo! 1. Send an email to Roberta Jacobson, interim Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemispheric Affairs to demand that the US stop financially and politically supporting militarization in El Salvador and Central America. 2. Sign a petition to President Funes in El Salvador expressing your concern about his recent appointments and expressing your support for human rights. 3. Call Melanie Bonner at the State Department's El Salvador desk at (202) 647-4161 to denounce US support for militarization in El Salvador! Sample call script: I am calling to express serious concern about recent US intervention in El Salvador. Specifically, I am concerned that the US pressured President Funes to replace members of his security cabinet with top-ranking military officials who have been trained by the US as a condition for receiving security aid. I am opposed to the US replicating the disastrous and devastating model it has imposed in Colombia and Mexico in Central America, including having the military play an active role in public security. I urge you to direct all the US security aid to El Salvador towards prevention and rehabilitation instead of further militarization. Click here to read more about this on the CISPES web site. CISPES - Committee In Solidarity with the People of El Salvador
TrackbackTrackback URL for this entry: http://www.micahscall.org/content/trackback.php/elsalvador_officers No trackback comments for this entry. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||





