Showing posts with label ProLibertad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ProLibertad. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2012

8/31: Rumba Con Salsa/Salsa Benefit Concert

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign

www.ProLibertadWeb.com

ProLibertad@hotmail.com

718-601-4751

RUMBA CON SALSA EN LA MANZANA


6:30pm-7:30pm: Reception with Former Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Luis Rosa Perez
Videos and Slides (Campaign to free Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Oscar Lopez
Rivera and of Tito Kayak's Kayaking Journey through the Carribbean for Oscar.
Presentation of Oscar's Book "Between Torture and Resistance"

Wine and Appetizers will be served!

7:45pm-8pm: Free Salsa Dance Lesson/Must purchase Concert Ticket to attend

Proceeds to cover expenses and donation towards translation of the Book "Between
Torture and Resistance" by Oscar Lopez Rivera

Tuesday, August 09, 2011

COINTELPRO 101 AND WHO IS ALBIZU CAMPOS?

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
www.ProLibertadweb.com
ProLibertad Hotline: 718-601-4751

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign is asking all of our supporters to support these
two wonderful upcoming events in NYC. Sekou Odinga is a long time friend to all
national liberation struggles and an unjustly incarcerated Political prisoner. The
film COINTELPRO 101 is an amazing film about how the U.S. government worked to
destabilize and destroy leftist movements in the U.S. starting with the PUERT RICAN
NATIONAL LIBERATION STRUGGLE.

Also, join us Sunday Sept. 18th for this amazing new documentary on Don Pedro Albizu
Campos, our greatest revolutionary nationalist teacher/hero/leader/former political
prisoner, who was cruelly assassinated by the U.S. government.

Tuesday, July 05, 2011

El Coqui Libre

http://www.prolibertadweb.com/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/ecljuly2011.pdf

Download the July edition of ProLibertad's monthly newsletter:
July 2011

This edition is dedicated to the newest Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Norberto
Gonzalez Claudio

Monday, July 04, 2011

Despierta Boricua Radio Segment

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
www.ProLibertadWeb.com
ProLibertad: 718-601-4751

Despierta Boricua is a ten minute Radio segment produced for WBAI radio 99.5 FM by
The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign. Despierta Boricua airs on Sundays at 3pm on Radio
Libre and at 3:50pm on Con Sabor Latino (both shows alternate the time slot every
week).

Despierta Boricua is dedicated to providing the New York City listening audience
with the latest news and updates on Puerto Rican politics and culture from U.S.
based Puerto Rican communities and the island of Puerto Rico.

Sunday July 3rd at 3pm on Radio Libre: This week's Segment will feature an interview
with artist/activit/educator Yasmin Hernandez, who will be talking with us about her
new mural in El Barrio, Soldaderas, and its unveiling in the Modesto Flores garden
in El Barrio. Radio Libre WBAI 99.5fm Despierta Boricua at 3pm


Check out our June Archive, which features an interview about Oscar Lopez Rivera's
new campaign; an interview about the arrest of our newest political prisoner
Norberto Gonzalez Claudio; and Ben Ramos reading ProLibertad presentation to the
United National Decolonization Committee on June 20th.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Letter from Prison by Norberto González Claudio

ENGLISH TRANSLATION FOLLOWS SPANISH

Carta desde la prisión de Norberto González Claudio

Una visita en el día de los Padres:

“Y abuelo, ¿Por qué no puedo estar ahí contigo?”

La visita que me hicieron parte de mis hijos,
nietos y esposa debió ser una del compartir
bonito, del compartir familiar bonito. Y así fue a medias...

Mi novia, esposa, amante y compañera (mi
jovencita preferida) y algo más de mis hijas e
hijos llegaron de la Nación Borincana, a visitar
al esposo, padre, y abuelo a una prisión
imperial: Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility. Y,
¿saben que pasó? Que ya el abuelo, padre, esposo,
compañero, Prisionero Político ha sido condenado
sin juicio, sin proceso de ley y sin cometer
faltas en esa prisión — de hecho llegué derechito
al hoyo y es tratado como todo un "criminal"
que tiene que estar encerrado, aislado, durante
las 24 horas del día, los 7 días de la semana en
una celda en solitario. ¡En soledad absoluta! ¡En
absoluta soledad! Pero estoy fuerte y combativo
aun bajo estas condiciones. ¡Arriba el amor!
¡Arriba la vida! ¡Arriba la lucha clasista y
libertaria de nuestra clase trabajadora Boricua!

En una celda en solitario solito y combativo.
Platiquemos sobre el día de los padres. Entre las
9:30 y las 10:00 de la mañana llegan los
trabajadores de la vigilancia para informar que
tenía visita — de hecho me felicitaron por ser
papá — me esposaron las manos y bajamos para ir a
otra celda donde me quitan las esposas de las
manos y me ponen la de los pies. Me siento en una
silla, tomo el teléfono y aparecen, en la
pantalla chica de una computadora mi familia que
se tienen que turnar para poder verme y yo poder verlos y hablar con ellos.

“Y abuelo, ¿Por qué no puedo estar ahí contigo?”
Es la pregunta que me hace, en su inocencia pura
e infantil, mi nietecito. Es posible que esa
pregunta refleja lo deshumanizado y cruel en que
se encuentra el sistema vigente en los E.U.A. Una
visita que debería ser para subir el ánimo de la
prisionera(o) que no he sido juzgado ni
condenado, se podría convertir en otra forma de
tortura. Y así es, otra forma más de tortura,
crueldad e insensibilidad cuando uno informa o
dice que el imperio U.S.A. es cruel, feroz,
sanguinario y deshumanizado es a este tipo de
conducta a lo que nos referimos, claro está, sin
olvidar las invasiones y bombardeos mortíferos a
otras naciones y el robo y el saqueo a éstas.

“Y abuelo, ¿Por qué no puedo estar ahí contigo?”
Señala claramente la insensibilidad y lo
insensible que son estos invasores y abusadores imperialistas.

Cuando yo informe a "mi consejera" Devonis que el
fin de semana vendría mi familia que si podía
hacer algo para poder ver a mi familia de cerca,
la contestación — tajante y clara — fue que no se podía hacer nada.

Así se vive y se muere en la nación de la
supuesta gran democracia y libertades de los
derechos civiles y humanos de primera. O quien
sabe si de segunda, o de tercera... ¿Democracia o
falsedad de democracia? ¿Derechos civiles y
humanos o falsedad de derechos civiles y humanos?

Un ser humano acusado, no condenado está en
solitaria como decimos por ahí, en el hoyo. Sin
ser condenado, por simplemente ser acusado. ¡SÍ,
SIMPLEMENTE Por Ser ACUSADO! ¡Por ser un
PRISIONERO POLÍTICO! POR SER UN PRI-SI-O-NE-RO PO-LÍ-TI-CO!

¡Ay mi madre! ¡EL IMPERIO APESTA, HIEDE, EMPEQUEÑECE, EMBRUTECE Y ENLOQUECE!

Así se vive y se muere en un imperio
deshumanizado por todos sus costados. Un imperio
del terror, de la mentira y el engaño. Un imperio
que sus días ya están llegando a su fin, para
bien de los seres humanos y para bien de la
humanidad, para bien del planeta Tierra, ¡NUESTRA CASA GRANDE!

¡Que la paz, el amor y la sabiduría nos acompañen siempre! ¡SIEMPRE!

Norberto González Claudio, 09864-000

Esposo, papá, abuelo, compañero de muchos
trabajadores y trabajadoras y PRISIONERO POLÍTICO.

¡NOS VEMOS PRONTO!

*****************************************************
Letter from prison by Norberto González Claudio

A Fathers' Day Visit:

"And grandfather, why can't I be there with you?"

The visit by some of my children, grandchildren
and my wife should have been one of beautiful
sharing, of beautiful family sharing. And it was
that way, to some extent . . .

My girlfriend, wife, lover and comrade (my
favorite young person) and more to my daughters
and sons, arrived from the Puerto Rican Nation,
to visit a husband, father and grandfather to an
imperialist prison: Donald W. Wyatt Detention
Facility. And, do you know what happened? That
already the grandfather, father, husband,
comrade, Political Prisoner, has been condemned
without trial, without due legal process and
without committing any infractions in that prison
in fact I arrived to go directly to solitary
confinement and treated like a complete
"criminal" that has to be shut away and isolated
for 24 hours a day, 7 days a week in a solitary
jail cell. In absolute solitude! In absolute
solitude! But I am strong and combative even
under these conditions. Long live love! Long
live life! Long live the class and freedom
struggle of our Puerto Rican working class!

In a solitary cell, in solitude and
combative. We talked about Fathers'
Day. Between 9:30 and 10:00 in the morning, the
prison guards came to tell me that I had visitors
in fact, they congratulated me for being a
father they handcuffed me and we went to
another cell where they removed my handcuffs and
shackled my feet. I sit in a chair, pick up the
telephone and in a small computer monitor my
family appears. They have to take turns to be
able to see me and for me to be able to see them and speak with them.

"And grandfather, why can't I be there with
you?" This is the question that my small
grandson asks me in his pure and childlike
innocence. It is likely that this question
reflects the dehumanizing and cruel nature that
characterizes the current system in the United
Sates. A visit that should have been one to
raise the spirits of a prisoner that hasn't
been tried or condemned can become another form
of torture. And that's the way it is, yet
another form of torture, cruelty and
insensitivity. It is this type of behavior that
one is referring to when you explain or say that
the U.S. Empire is cruel, brutal, bloody and
dehumanizing. It is clear that we do so without
forgetting the invasions, deadly bombings against
other nations and the looting and ransacking of these.

"And grandfather, why can't I be there with
you?" This points out clearly the insensibility
and cruelty of these invaders and abusive imperialists.

When I informed my "counselor" Devonis that on
the weekend my family would come to visit and
asked if something could be done for me to be
able to see my family more closely, the response
cutting and clear was that nothing could be done.

That it how you live and die in the nation of
supposed great democracy and civil and human
rights of the first order. Or, who knows, if
it's second or third order . . . Democracy or the
falsehood of democracy? Civil and human rights
or the falsehood of civil and human rights?

A human being that is accused but not convicted
is in solitary or as we say out there, in the
hole. Without being convicted but being simply
accused. YES, SIMPLY FOR BEING ACCUSED! For
being a POLITICAL PRISONER! FOR BEING A PO-LI-TI-CAL PRI-SO-NER!

It's astounding! THE EMPIRE'S STENCH! IT STINKS
AND SEEKS TO MAKE US INSIGNIFICANT AND SMALL . .
. IT BRUTALIZES AND TRIES TO DRIVE US MAD!

That is how you live and die in a dehumanizing
empire at its hands and at all costs. An empire
of terror, of lies and deceit. An empire whose
days are already numbered to the benefit of all
human beings and for the benefit of humanity and
the good of the Planet Earth, OUR LARGER HOME.

May peace, love and wisdom always accompany us! ALWAYS!

Norberto González Claudio, 09864-000

Husband, father, grandfather, comrade to many men
and women workers and POLITICAL PRISONER.

WE WILL SEE ONE ANOTHER SOON!

English Translation by Frank Velgara, ProLibertad
Freedom Campaign, Socialist Front of Puerto Rico.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Letter writing for the Puerto Rican PPs and Free Oscar Lopez Rivera

In solidarity with Freedom Month, NYC ABC will be dedicating its May 24th Political
Prisoner Letter-Writing Dinner to the Puerto Rican political prisoners.


WHAT: Political Prisoner Letter-Writing Dinner
WHEN: 7:00pm (sharp!), Tuesday, May 24th
WHERE: 885 Park Avenue, Brooklyn, New York (see below for directions)

The deal, as always, is that you come bringing only yourself (and your friends and
comrades), and we provide you with a delicious vegan meal,
information about the prisoners as well as all of the letter-writing materials and
prisoner-letter-writing info you could ever want to use in one evening. In return,
you write a thoughtful letter to a political prisoner or prisoner of war of your
choosing or, better yet, keep up along-term correspondence. We’ll also provide some
brief updates and passaround birthday cards for the PP/POWs whose birthdays fall in
the next two
weeks thanks to the Anarchist Birthday Brigade.

DIRECTIONS:
Getting to 885 Park Avenue is simple:

From the J/M/Z:
Flushing Stop: Walk southeast on Broadway (toward Sumner Place, away fromThornton
Street) and make a right on Park Avenue. We’re halfway down theblock, on your right.
Myrtle Stop: Walk northwest on Broadway (toward Melrose Street, away fromTroutman
Street) and make a left on Park Avenue. We’re halfway down theblock on the right.

From the G Train:
Flushing Avenue Stop: Walk south on Marcy Avenue (toward Hopkins Street,away from
Wallabout Street) and turn left on Park Avenue. We’re three anda half blocks down on
the left. Myrtle-Willoughby Avenues Stop: Walk north on Marcy Avenue (towardStockton
Street, away from Vernon Avenue) and turn right on Park
Avenue.We’re three and a half blocks down on your left.

If you have any questions, feel free to get in touch. Otherwise, we’ll see you at
supper.
This event is brought to you by your friendly neighborhood Anarchist Black Cross.

NYC ABC
Post Office Box 110034
Brooklyn, New York 11211

Friday, May 20, 2011

Oscar Lopez Rivera and Norberto Gonzalez Claudio

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
www.ProLibertadweb.com
ProlIbertad Hotline: 718-601-4751

Below this message is an announcement for the May 28th: Free Oscar Lopez Rivera
community March in the South Bronx, please scroll down to the end to see it!

On Friday May 20th, Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Norberto González Claudio wll be
arraigned at the Hartford Conn Federal Court House at 3pm. We are asking people to
stay alert.

Biography of Norberto González Claudio

Born in Vega Baja on May 27, 1945, the second youngest of 6 siblings: 2 women,
Mercedes and María Magdalena, and 3 men, Avelino, Orlando and Wilfredo. He lived in
the neighborhood of Almirante Sur with his mother Cristina Claudio Narváez and his
father Antonio González Vega until he was 7 years old. The family then moved to the
neighborhood of Rio Abajo to “the González farm” (his family), where he stayed until
he married Elda Santiago Pérez in 1979. Together they had 3 children: Elda Cristina,
Susana and Carlos, and they also raised Elda’s sons Pedro and Ramón as their own.

During his childhood, he played and ran around like every child does. His father
called him Captain. He always had fond memories of his father, but his mother was
someone very special for him. Her serenity, firmness, strength, wisdom, the strength
of a working woman that his mother embodied have been his inheritance and his pride.
With her he learned love, sensitivity, and simplicity, as well as to not give in to
the powerful.

He joined the struggle for social justice and the independence of Puerto Rico in the
decade of the 60's while he was a university student. He was a member of the
Federation of Pro Independence Students (FUPI), the Pro Independence Movement (MPI)
and the Puerto Rican Socialist Party (PSP). He got his political training in the
Arecibo region. He was known in his town for selling the newspaper Claridad.

He had a post on a corner of Betances Street in the center of his town, and put on
activities of protest music in the plaza. He actively participated in the Vega
Baja’s Garbage Collectors strike in 1970, in the student strikes of 1970 and 1971 at
the University of Puerto Rico, and in the protests against the mines in Adjuntas,
where he camped out for several months.

He was in clandestinity since 1985 for defending his people, his homeland, his
nation, and fighting for socialism because he thinks it is the just economic model
for all peoples.

He is in solidarity with Latin American countries in their restorative struggles
and with all countries that struggle for their freedom and for socialism. He
fervently believes and struggles for patriotic unity. “We must unite on everything
we can agree on. Our differences should be left for internal discussions within
each organization,” he insists.
He is a poet. He writes of his family, life, the homeland, youth, and his eternal
love: his wife, to whom, as if a premonition of his future, he dedicated since the
very moment they got married Don Pablo Neruda’s The Letter on the Road.

Now, he is captured by the repressive forces of the northamerican government who
seek to criminalize the struggle for the independence of our people and those who
defend our Puerto Rican nation.



Arrest of González Claudio was an FBI “show”
By Perla Franco
Published Tuesday May 17, 2011
http://www.claridadpuertorico.com/content.html?news=FF101593E35035283AEF563401BC126E

“Norberto González Claudio has dedicated his life to the struggle for the
independence of Puerto Rico. He is a patriot, not a terrorist. Keeping a nation
under the colonial yoke is a crime against humanity, according to the United
Nations. Thus, the struggle to end oppression and colonialism is patriotism, as has
been proved in liberation struggles that all the free countries of the world have
waged. We condemn the arrest of this patriot and are in solidarity with him and his
family.”

With this convincing stipulation in a press release, more than a dozen
independentista organizations convened a protest last Friday May 13 in front of the
Federal Court on Chardón Avenue in Hato Rey, while inside the building Norberto
González Claudio’s extradition hearing was taking place in magistrate Bruce
McGiverin’s courtroom.

When family members entered McGiverin’s courtroom, González Claudio was already
there, his hands and feet shackled, dressed in a beige jumpsuit and phosphorescent
orange tennis shoes, the uniform the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC). His wife,
sister-in-law, children and grandchildren were seated on the opposite side of the
courtroom. An agent entered and handed the family “an object of value the arrestee
had when he was detained,” and went on to hand his wife a wedding ring. When his
five year old grandson noticed that his grandfather was in the room, he said out
loud, “look at Grandpa over there.” A little later, the hearing, which would last
around two and a half hours, began.

The hearing began with the magistrate denying the request from one of the defense
lawyers, Juan Matos, to postpone the hearing because he hadn’t had enough time to
meet with González Claudio.

FBI agent gives his version of the arrest
Assistant U.S. Attorney Warren Vázquez’ first witness was an “FBI special agent” who
identified himself as David González. He detailed that he was in San Juan when a
task force located in Guavate, Cayey called him to say they had seen someone they
thought was González Claudio. He assured that this group was involved in efforts
unrelated to González Claudio’s arrest. Later, in response to cross-examination, he
said it took him some 25 minutes to get to the place where González Claudio was
exercising in a community park on Highway 184, and that he identified him by the one
droopy eyelid González Claudio was known to have, and by his left leg being much
shorter than his right leg.

The agent claimed to be familiar with the file of the accused, who he identified as
a Machetero, an organization he said was founded in 1975, and which in 2005 the U.S.
government labeled as terrorist. He added that the charges against him were for
conspiracy to commit robbery. He stated that when he approached him to arrest him,
he said, “hey mister, look at me, come with me.” He said González Claudio took a
deep breath, looked behind, and the agent said, “don’t do this to me,” and that
González Claudio moved his head and went toward the steps where the agent told him
“sit down.” He said González Claudio smiled and said, “you caught me.” According to
the agent, González Claudio had several false names, including Carmelo Vélez Moya,
which he used to get a drivers license at the end of 1990.

According to his story, after the arrest, he was taken to the office of the head of
the FBI, Luis Fraticelli. The defense attorney asked why he was taken there, since
that isn’t the procedure. The agent responded that he’d received orders from his
supervisor to do that. He related that while there, Fraticelli asked him if he
needed medication, and if he was in good health, and he commented that he looked
like his brother Avelino, to which the arrestee allegedly responded, “we’re from the
same blood.” He said Fraticelli asked if he wanted to speak with his family, and
that González Claudio said he did. From right there, with the speakerphone on, he
called his wife and told her he was in Fraticelli’s office, and that he was ok. From
there they took him to booking, and when they asked him to sign, the arrestee signed
his name as Norberto González.

The government also called probation officer Patricia Encarnación Miranda, who said
that when she interviewed the arrestee and told him to sign his name, he wrote
Norberto González. The defense argued, and it was corroborated by the agent who
conducted the arrest, that González Claudio was never read his rights, not when they
arrested him, and not when Fraticelli tried to talk with him, questioning him, which
the defense said violated his right not to incriminate himself.

In closing arguments, the defense attorney urged that until extradition, González
Claudio be placed under 24 hour a day house arrest. But the magistrate said the
accused was a “dangerous” person due to “his philosophical vision and that of the
political organization he belongs to.”

At the end of the hearing, his family, guarded by an agent, was instructed not to
leave the courtroom until the accused had left. González Claudio walked by them,
leaning his body and throwing a kiss to his five year old grandson, who at the time
was two or three steps away. The child responded, shouting, “I love you, Grandpa,”
and immediately asked the attorney who came after, “Why didn’t they let my grandpa
go?” The attorney answered, “I tried, but I couldn’t. They decided not to let him
go.” And the child said, as if it were a child’s game, “well, you had to hide.”

Agent claims they found weapons
Agent González added, in response to the U.S. Attorney’s questions, that in the
search of González Claudio’s alleged residence in Guavate, at his bedside they found
two revolvers and a loaded automatic rifle with additional ammunition, in addition
to two bulletproof vests. The agent didn’t answer defense questions about the number
of agents who participated in the operation, as the government objected that it was
“irrelevant,” and the magistrate sustained the objection. During cross-examination,
the defense managed to obtain information that the agent had been working for two
years for the U.S. Attorney in San Juan, and that prior to this arrest he hadn’t
done any other work in that place. Sometimes the agent, who responded to the
government’s questions with aplomb and firmness, responded to cross-examination
looking more disjointed, confused, and nervous, and asked that questions be
repeated. At those times, he looked at the Assistant U.S. Attorney as if he were
looking for approval. It seemed as though he hadn’t read the charges against
González Claudio.

Family embraces the arrestee
A second government witness was Samuel Santana, who identified himself as a National
Security special agent in San Juan, and who claimed to have been investigating the
Macheteros since 1995. He said that since then he had references about González
Claudio, whose 1985 photo he carried with him. He said he was the one who received
González Claudio’s wife when she came to the federal building after his arrest. And
he said he recognized Norberto’s brother Orlando, who he approached and asked if he
wanted to see his brother, to which Orlando said he did, because he hadn’t seen him
in years. He stated that he allowed them both, along with Norberto’s brother-in-law,
to be present during Norberto’s booking. He stated that Orlando hugged Norberto, and
that Norberto smiled but didn’t otherwise move, as he was handcuffed.

The federal charges against Norberto González Claudio at the time of his arrest on
May 10 don’t directly tie him to the theft of $7.2 million from Wells Fargo in
Connecticut. Essentially he is charged with the FBI identifying him as a member of
the clandestine independentista organization The Macheteros. Many consider that his
arrest was an FBI show to improve the agency’s image.

Comments to pfranco@claridadpuertorico.com

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

5/1: Puerto Rican Contingent for May Day 2011!

NOW MORE THAN EVER, WE NEED TO BUILD A BROAD, STRONG AND UNITED PUERTO RICAN
CONTINGENT FOR INTERNATIONAL WORKERS' MAY DAY 2011!

Sunday May 1st, 2011 at 12pm
Union Square (14th st and broadway)
Take the 4,5,6,N,Q, R, to Union Square

LOOK FOR THE PUERTO RICAN FLAGS! BRING YOUR OWN FLAG, PANDERETAS, NOISE MAKERS, AND
WHISTLES!

We are calling for a Strong Powerful Puerto Rican Contingent to march in solidairty
with all workers this May Day! Puerto Rican workers, both on the Island and
throughout the Diaspora, have been fighting against privatization of
education/social services, demanding new jobs, union rights, and housing; just like
other workers' have throughout the United States, Latin America and the world!

FOR DECADES, Puerto Ricans have stood proudly and firmly with our undocumented
brothers and sisters; demanding their legalization and an end to their harrassment!

Let us continue in our proud tradition of internationalist solidarity with the
workers' of the world!

JOIN THE PUERTO RICAN CONTINGENT FOR MAY DAY 2011!
EMAIL US AND LET US KNOW THAT YOU ARE JOINING OUR CONTINGENT:
prolibertad.campaign@gmail.com

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

5/1: Puerto Rican Contingent for May Day

NOW MORE THAN EVER, WE NEED TO BUILD A BROAD, STRONG AND UNITED PUERTO RICAN
CONTINGENT FOR INTERNATIONAL WORKERS' MAY DAY 2011!

Sunday May 1st, 2011 at 12pm
Union Square (14th st and broadway)
Take the 4,5,6,N,Q, R, to Union Square

LOOK FOR THE PUERTO RICAN FLAGS! BRING YOUR OWN FLAG, PANDERETAS, NOISE MAKERS, AND
WHISTLES!

We are calling for a Strong Powerful Puerto Rican Contingent to march in solidairty
with all workers this May Day! Puerto Rican workers, both on the Island and
throughout the Diaspora, have been fighting against privatization of
education/social services, demanding new jobs, union rights, and housing; just like
other workers' have throughout the United States, Latin America and the world!

FOR DECADES, Puerto Ricans have stood proudly and firmly with our undocumented
brothers and sisters; demanding their legalization and an end to their harrassment!

Let us continue in our proud tradition of internationalist solidarity with the
workers' of the world!

JOIN THE PUERTO RICAN CONTINGENT FOR MAY DAY 2011!

Endorsers: The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign, NYC con UPR, and The Puerto Rican
Solidarity Network

Monday, March 21, 2011

New Petition for Oscar Lopez Rivera/Celebrating the Revolutionary Puerto Rican Woman!

30 Signers is not enough! Oscar Needs our support right now! Sign this petition and
get it out far and wide!

MARCH UPDATE/CALL TO ACTION!

People of conscience throughout the world were outraged by news that the U.S. Parole
Commission refused to parole Puerto Rican political prisoner Oscar López Rivera
after close to 30 years in prison for his support of Puerto Rican independence.
Thousands of people, including members of U.S. Congress, religious leaders, artists,
scholars, and community members support his immediate release.

The Parole Commission’s inhumane decision, issued on February 18, ignored both the
specifics of Oscar’s case and the broad-based international humanitarian support for
his immediate release. The Commission, basing its unjust decision on falsehoods and
inaccuracies, ruled that Oscar must remain in prison another 15 years or until the
duration of his sentence, whichever comes first.

Though this represents a significant setback, the National Boricua Human Rights
Network (NBHRN) has no doubt the campaign for Oscar’s freedom will be victorious.
The Puerto Rican people and their allies have succeeded in winning the release of
three generations of political prisoners, an unparalleled accomplishment. This
campaign will be no different.

After consulting with Oscar and the campaign for his release, his attorney will ask
the Parole Commission to reconsider its wrongheaded ruling. Activists and leaders
from the U.S., Puerto Rico and abroad have started to aggressively plan and launch
the next phase of the campaign.

There are many ways to contribute to this campaign:

You can sign the ProLibertad Freedom Campaign's NEW online parole petition based on
the NBHRN letter: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/olrnewparole/

ProLibertad will be mailing out a hard copy of the petition to Chairman Fulwood
every time we reach a multiple of 100.

AND SIGN/FAX/MAIL THE NBHRN LETTER

CELEBRATING THE REVOLUTIONARY PUERTO RICAN WOMAN!

Join The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign as we honor the contributions of Women to the
Puerto Rican independence Movement! This year we dedicate our event to the amazing
sisters who are leading the student strike at the University of Puerto Rico!

Recipients of the Doña Adelfa Vera Award for 2011:
Melissa Montero, National Boricua Human Rights Network
Sally O’Brien, Where we Live and Cuba en Focus, WBAI

Keynote Speakers:
Iris Zavala, Psychologist, feminist radical and independence activist
A representative of the NY con UPR Committee

Performers:
Storm of the Welfare Poets, Poet/Singer
Rafael Landron, Poet
A-FIG MC, Rapper
Bonafide Rojas, Poet
Taina Asili, Singer

Handcrafts and Art:
Olga Ayala, HECHO A MANO
Luis Cordero, Cemi Underground

THURSDAY MARCH 31ST, 2011 AT 6:30PM
Taller Boricua’s Multi Arts Space at
Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center
1680 Lexington Avenue @ E. 106th St. (6 Train to E. 103rd St.)

Suggested donation: $10 (no one will be turned away)

LIGHT REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED!

Sponsors: ProLibertad, Cemi Underground and Taller Boricua

For more information contact ProLibertad: 718-601-4751 * www.ProLibertadWeb.com

Monday, March 07, 2011

Petition for Oscar Lopez Rivera/Celebrating the Revolutionary Puerto Rican Woman!

MARCH UPDATE/CALL TO ACTION!

People of conscience throughout the world were outraged by news that the U.S. Parole
Commission refused to parole Puerto Rican political prisoner Oscar López Rivera
after close to 30 years in prison for his support of Puerto Rican independence.
Thousands of people, including members of U.S. Congress, religious leaders, artists,
scholars, and community members support his immediate release.

The Parole Commission’s inhumane decision, issued on February 18, ignored both the
specifics of Oscar’s case and the broad-based international humanitarian support for
his immediate release. The Commission, basing its unjust decision on falsehoods and
inaccuracies, ruled that Oscar must remain in prison another 15 years or until the
duration of his sentence, whichever comes first.

Though this represents a significant setback, the National Boricua Human Rights
Network (NBHRN) has no doubt the campaign for Oscar’s freedom will be victorious.
The Puerto Rican people and their allies have succeeded in winning the release of
three generations of political prisoners, an unparalleled accomplishment. This
campaign will be no different.

After consulting with Oscar and the campaign for his release, his attorney will ask
the Parole Commission to reconsider its wrongheaded ruling. Activists and leaders
from the U.S., Puerto Rico and abroad have started to aggressively plan and launch
the next phase of the campaign.

There are many ways to contribute to this campaign:

You can sign the ProLibertad Freedom Campaign's NEW online parole petition based on
the NBHRN letter: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/olrnewparole/

ProLibertad will be mailing out a hard copy of the petition to Chairman Fulwood
every time we reach a multiple of 100.

AND SIGN/FAX/MAIL THE NBHRN LETTER

CELEBRATING THE REVOLUTIONARY PUERTO RICAN WOMAN!

Join The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign as we honor the contributions of Women to the
Puerto Rican independence Movement! This year we dedicate our event to the amazing
sisters who are leading the student strike at the University of Puerto Rico!

Recipients of the Doña Adelfa Vera Award for 2011:
Melissa Montero, National Boricua Human Rights Network
Sally O’Brien, Where we Live and Cuba en Focus, WBAI

Keynote Speakers:
Iris Zavala, Psychologist, feminist radical and
independence activist
A representative of the NY con UPR Committee

Performers:
Storm of the Welfare Poets, Poet/Singer
Rafael Landron, Poet
A-FIG MC, Rapper
Bonafide Rojas, Poet

Handcrafts and Art:
Olga Ayala, HECHO A MANO
Luis Cordero, Cemi Underground

THURSDAY MARCH 31ST, 2011 AT 6:30PM
Taller Boricua’s Multi Arts Space at
Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center
1680 Lexington Avenue @ E. 106th St. (6 Train to E. 103rd St.)

Suggested donation: $10 (no one will be turned away)

LIGHT REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED!

Sponsors: ProLibertad, Cemi Underground and Taller Boricua

For more information contact ProLibertad: 718-601-4751 * www.ProLibertadWeb.com

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

3/31st: Celebrating the Revolutionary Puerto Rican Woman!

Save the date:

CELEBRATING THE REVOLUTIONARY PUERTO RICAN WOMAN!

Join The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign as we honor the contributions of Women to the
Puerto Rican independence Movement! This year we dedicate our event to the amazing
sisters who are leading the student strike at the University of Puerto Rico!

Recipients of the Doña Adelfa Vera Award for 2011:
Melissa Montero, National Boricua Human Rights Network
Sally O’Brien, Where we Live and Cuba en Focus, WBAI

Keynote Speakers:
Iris Zavala, Psychologist, feminist radical and
independence activist
A representative of the NY con UPR Committee

Performers:
Storm of the Welfare Poets, Poet/Singer
Rafael Landron, Poet
A-FIG MC, Rapper
Bonafide Rojas, Poet

Handcrafts and Art:
Olga Ayala, HECHO A MANO
Luis Cordero, Cemi Underground

THURSDAY MARCH 31ST, 2011 AT 6:30PM
Taller Boricua’s Multi Arts Space at
Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center
1680 Lexington Avenue @ E. 106th St. (6 Train to E. 103rd St.)

Suggested donation: $10 (no one will be turned away)

LIGHT REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED!

Sponsors: ProLibertad, Cemi Underground and Taller Boricua

For more information contact ProLibertad: 718-601-4751 * www.ProLibertadWeb.com

Monday, February 21, 2011

Updates on the Puerto Rican Political Prisoners

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
www.ProLibertdWeb.com
ProLibertad Hotline: 718-601-4751


The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign is asking our allies and supporters to take some
time to write to both the Puerto Rican Political prisoners (Oscar Lopz Rivera and
Avelino Gonzalez Claudio) in these difficult times. Oscar was recently denied
parole and Avelino has finally been moved to a new prison.

Both brothers have been through incredible stress and need our support. Please
these updates and forward out.



Oscar Lopez Rivera Update:
February 18, 2011

Today the U.S. Parole Commission issued its decision in the case of Puerto Rican
political prisoner Oscar López Rivera, stating “Deny
parole. Continue to a 15-year reconsideration hearing in January 2026 or continue to
expiration, whichever comes first.”

In a decision which ignored the express will of the Puerto Rican people and those
who believe in justice and human rights, counting tens of thousands of voices supporting his immediate release, the Commission ignored
the evidence establishing that Oscar met all the criteria for parole, and also ignored its own rules in the process. Among these many
ignored voices are members of legislatures including the United States Congress; the
state legislatures of New York, Illinois, Ohio and Pennsylvania; the city councils
and county boards of many locales in the U.S. and Puerto Rico; the mayors of many towns in the U.S. and Puerto Rico, including the Association of
Mayors of Puerto Rico; bar associations including the Puerto Rico Bar Association,
the National Lawyers Guild and the American Association of Jurists; clergy and
religious organizations, including the Ecumenical Coalition representing every
religious denomination in Puerto Rico; human rights advocates, academics, students,
artists, community organizations, and workers.

Oscar, his family, his attorney, National Boricua Human Rights Network in the U.S.
and the Comité Pro Derechos Humanos in Puerto Rico want to express our deepest
gratitude for the vast support for his release.

Oscar and his attorney Jan Susler will meet next week to discuss the decision.
Meanwhile, the National Boricua Human Rights Network in the U.S. and the Comité Pro
Derechos Humanos in Puerto Rico will continue the campaign to express to the Parole
Commission the depth and breadth of support for Oscar’s immediate release.

Oscar Lopez Rivera #87651-024FCI Terre Haute PO Box 33Terre Haute, IN, 47808


Avelino Gonzalez Claudio Update:

Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Avelino González Claudio has once again been
relocated to another Federal Correctional Facility. Avelino is now in the State of
Kentucky. He is being provided more adequate health care than in recent times. He is
also finally in the general population and able to exercise on a more regular basis.
Please keep him in your hearts and minds.

Avelino González Claudio
#09873-000
FCI Ashland
PO Box 6001
Ashland, KY 41105

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

Urgent Campaign for PRican PP Oscar Lopez Rivera

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign is calling on all our allies to read the EMERGENCY
ALERT below! We have EIGHT DAYS to make Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Oscar Lopez
Rivera's freedom a reality! We ask that people take time out from their day and
make a phone call every day! Mass pressure will free our brother! MAKE A PHONE CALL
EACH DAY THESE NEXT 8 DAYS!

EMERGENCY • URGENT • EMERGENCY • URGENT • EMERGENCY • URGENT

NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL EMERGENCY CAMPAIGN
January 22, 2011
Please forward far and wide-facebook, twitter, etc

A Parole Commission spokesperson just told Puerto Rican political prisoner Oscar
López Rivera’s attorney that the decision whether to parole Oscar could be made by
February 1-THAT MEANS WE HAVE 8 DAYS TO IMPACT THE PAROLE BOARD POSITIVELY TO REJECT
THE PAROLE EXAMINERS RECOMMENDATION.


Research reveals that the Parole Commission adopts the recommendation of their
hearing examiners about 80% of the time. Research also reveals that the Parole
Commission can be very vulnerable to negative outside pressure, especially from law
enforcement.


This means we have an uphill battle.

All of this means that if we want to see Oscar come home, we must mail/fax the
Parole Board more support letters NOW. All support letters must reach the Parole
Commission by February 1.



If the Commission takes longer than 30 days to decide, then we will continue our
accelerated efforts to collect support letters.


Please do the following immediately:

1) Contact at least 20 more people to fax (301/492-5543) and mail the attached
letter to the Parole Board. If the attachment does not go through. please go the
http://boricuahumanrights.org and download the letter. Contact us at
alejandrom@boricuahumanrights.org and let us know how many letters were
mailed/faxed.

2) Call the Parole Board (301.492.5990) at and use the attached script (text is also
at the bottom of this email. START CALLING ON MONDAY, JANUARY 24 EVERY DAY UNTIL WE
RECEIVE NOTIFICATION THAT THE PAROLE BOARD HAS REJECTED OR CONFIRMED THE EXAMINER'S
DECISION. I

PHONE CALL script

To U.S. Parole Board 301.492.5990
Hi, my name is ______________ and I live in Chicago The Parole Commission should
parole Oscar López Rivera# 87651-024 immediately, in spite of the hearing examiner’s
recommendation to deny parole. IF YOU HAVE TIME, YOU CAN USE ONE OF THE FOLLOWING
REASONS: 1) Oscar has the support of a broad sector of Puerto Rico’s civil society
as well as Puerto Rican and Latino communities throughout the United States. 2)
Oscar was not accused or convicted of causing injury or taking a life. He was never
accused or convicted of participating in the 1975 Fraunces Tavern bombing or any
other action that resulted in injury or death. 3) President Clinton’s determination
that Mr. López Rivera’s sentence was disproportionately lengthy, and his offer that
would have resulted in Mr. López Rivera’s release in September of 2009. Parole Board
Phone call-in script Every Wednesday, starting January 19, from 9-5 EST until
further notice US Parole Board phone: (301) 492-5990

Sunday, January 23, 2011

35 Years is Too Long! Free Leonard Peltier Now!

Saturday, February 5, 2011
3 to 6 p.m.

The Brecht Forum, 451 West Street
(between Bank & Bethune Sts.)

Speakers to be Announced

Program will include a showing of THE CANARY EFFECT
An award-winning documentary by directors Robin Davey and Yellow Thunder Woman, the
film explores the effects of the ongoing genocide carried out against Native peoples
of what is now the U.S. Interviews with Ward Churchill, Troy Johnson, and Charles
Abourezk.

Potluck to follow! Please bring a dish for everyone to share!
Call 347-731-9947 after 7pm to arrange your food contribution

Sponsors: NYC LPDOC, NYC Jericho Movement, ProLibertad (list in formation)

For more info: NYCLPDOC • nyclpdoc@gmail.com • 718-325-4407

Monday, January 17, 2011

Urgent Support Oscar Lopez Rivera!

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign is calling on all our allies and
supporters to join the NBHRN campaign to Call and fax the US Parole
Commission and demand that Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Oscar Lopez
Rivera be granted parole!

Parole Board Phone call-in script

Every Wednesday, starting January 19, from 9-5 EST until further
notice

US Parole Board phone: (301) 492-5990


Hi, my name is ______________ and I live in
Chicago [NY, etc.]

The Parole Commission should parole Oscar López # 87651-024 immediately,
in spite of the hearing examiner’s recommendation to deny
parole.


IF YOU HAVE TIME, USE ONE OF THE FOLLOWING REASONS:

1) Oscar has the support of a broad sector of Puerto Rico’s civil society
as well as Puerto Rican and Latino communities throughout the United
States.

2) Oscar was not accused or convicted of causing injury or taking a life.
He was never accused or convicted of participating in the 1975 Fraunces
Tavern bombing or any other action that resulted in injury that resulted
in injury or death.

3) President Clinton’s determination that Mr. López Rivera’s sentence was
disproportionately lengthy, and his offer that would have resulted in Mr.
López Rivera’s release in September of 2009.


******************************************************************************

Freedom for Oscar, Now!

Editorial, Claridad

January 13, 2011

“I don’t see how they can justify another 12 years of prison after he has
spent practically 30 years in prison, and the others who were charged
with the same conduct are already in the free community. It seems to me
to be excessive punishment.”

These words of the resident commissioner of Puerto Rico in Washington,
Pedro Pierluisi, dramatize the flagrant injustice embodied in the
decision of hearing examiner Mark Tanner, who was assigned to evaluate
the request for parole filed by Puerto Rican political prisoner Oscar
López Rivera, and who decided to recommend to the U.S. Parole Commission
that he be kept in prison for at least 12 more years.

This examiner practically turned the Puerto Rican patriot’s parole
hearing into a new trial and a political circus, denying him the
opportunity already enjoyed by his companeros who were in prison for the
same charges.

The Parole Commission is not obligated to adopt the hearing examiner’s
recommendation. Its members can decide that Oscar López has already been
sufficiently punished and order his release, which requires that our
nation make itself forcefully heard, demanding the release of our
compatriot.

No one with a minimal sensitivity and good judgment could doubt that
Oscar López Rivera ­ same as the former Nationalist prisoners and the
other already released Puerto Rican political prisoners ­ is someone who
struggles conscientiously, whose life and actions reflect his commitment
to a cause that he believes to be superior to himself: the struggle for
the freedom of his people. In addition, Oscar is a fine person whose
integration into Puerto Rican society will be positive, just as it has
been for the other ex political prisoners. Thus, the long battle our
nation has waged to win their release ­ lasting from the second half of
the 20th century through today ­ has attracted the solidarity
of thousands of people in Puerto Rico and throughout the world.

The Puerto Rican members of the United States Congress ­ José Serrano,
Nydia Velázquez and Luis Gutiérrez ­ who have for a long time been the
standard bearers of this cause, are now joined by the Resident
Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi, in an act of sensitivity and human
solidarity worthy of praise. In the past, Puerto Rican politicians and
leaders of every tendency and every front have joined this great effort,
just as now the mayor of the town of San Sebastián, Javier Jiménez Pérez,
has valiantly done.

It is now our turn, the turn of all Puerto Ricans of good will, to
redouble efforts to win the immediate release of Oscar López, supporting
every step carried out so that the Parole Commission rejects the hearing
examiner’s recommendation and grants Oscar parole, just as it did
recently to Carlos Alberto Torres. Our nation must be ready, just as we
have been before, to make this happen, in every way possible, going even
so far as to the U.S. president Barack Obama, if that becomes necessary.

The pages of CLARIDAD have been open ­ always and unconditionally ­ to
the demand for the release of our patriots, a task which we continue to
be ready to do, until we accomplish the urgent objective of bringing
Oscar López Rivera home free ­ and the same applies to Avelino González
Claudio, who is also in prison for the cause of the independence of
Puerto Rico ­ to receive the embrace and the solidarity of their people.

Friday, January 07, 2011

Postponement: Jan 8th Activity

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign
www.prolibertadweb.com
Hotline: 718-601-4751

The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign is sad to announce that the January 8th Celebration
of three Kings Day and Birthday event for Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Oscar
Lopez Rivera is being postponed due to weather damage/structural security issues
that have taken place at the venue.

We will be re-emailing the new date/time and venue for our celebration within the
next few days.

We are asking everyone reading this email to send Oscar a birthday card over the
weekend to let him know thatw e are thinking of him and wil not let the paroel
Examiner's negative review become the final decision of the Parol Commission.


Check these links out:
Oscar's Address and a report on his parole hearing

Monday, January 03, 2011

Jan. 8th: Three Kings Celebration/Oscar Lopez Rivera's Birthday party!


The ProLibertad Freedom Campaign wishes everyone a Happy New year of resistance,
struggle, unity and freedom!


¡BOMBA Y PLENA pa' los presos!

Happy Three Kings Day Celebration!
Happy 68th Birthday Oscar Lopez Rivera!


Sat. January 8th, 2011 @ 7pm
St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
521 w126th St.
(Btwn. Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue) Take the 1 train to w125th St.
Suggest donation: $10 (no one will be turned away due to lack of funds!)

Join ProLibertad for a night of incredible CULTURE, RESISTANCE and
CELEBRATION! Come and have a great time as we celebrate Three Kings Day and the 68th
birthday of Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Oscar Lopez Rivera with:

The incredible BombaYo:
BombaYo emerges from the streets and schoolyards of the Bronx, where salsa and hip
hop were born. Under the direction of Jose L. Ortiz aka Dr. Drum and Melinda
Gonzalez, this group of teens brings youthful energy to a centuries old Afro Puerto
Rican music and dance tradition. BombaYo starts from within. At the core is a
connection to the soul, where drum and dance become one. African inspired call and
response singing complete the synergy.

Three Kings of Poetry:
The Powerful Bonafide Rojas
Nuyorican Poet/Activist Papoleto Melendez

The Incredible Rafael Landron

The Spectacular Music of DJ Carlito and DJ Che

and

The ASTONISHING Boricua Arts/Crafts/T-shirts/Books of:

Cemi underground
http://www.cemiunderground.com/