
IPO is an organization of international accompaniment and communication working in solidarity with organizations that practice nonviolent resistance.
18.08.10: Colombian court strikes down U.S. defense agreement
5.08.10: NGO: ’Alarming’ link between US aid and ’false positives’
10.06.10: Colombia: A country of rising inequality
8.06.10: Statement by IPO regarding the Israeli Army's boarding of the Gaza-bound humanitarian aid ships
12.05.10: We want real changes in US-Colombia policy: WOLA
30.04.10: European Parliament seeks clarification for the DAS espionage
1.10.09: Ressisting US military Bases: Colombia in Context
7.07.08: US Military Special-Ops Team, and Not the Colombian Army, Carried Out Hostage Rescue in Colombia
4.06.08: Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International Slam UK Military Aid to Colombia
4.06.08: Smoke and Mirrors - British Military Aid to Colombia
15.04.12: Gallery of Remembrance Assaulted, Censored, and Threatened on April 9 in Villavicencio, Meta
18.02.12: Civilian dwellings in Agualinda bombed by the Army’s 4th Division
19.12.11: More Human Rights Violations in Huila
26.11.11: ASOCBAC Leader Fredy Jimenez Assassinated in Taraza
12.11.11: Member of CPDH held captive for 40 days
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28.03.06
Washington, DC – This week two South American countries sent a strong message of support for human rights and military accountability by Washington, DC – This week two South American countries sent a strong message of support for human rights and military accountability by ceasing all military training of their troops at the controversial U.S. Army’s School of the Americas. Nilda Garré, the Defense Minister of Argentina, and Azucena Berrutti, Uruguay’s Minister of Defense, decided this week to stop sending soldiers from their countries to train at the military school based at Fort Benning, Georgia and now called the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation (SOA/ WHINSEC).
The critical decisions by the two countries followed meetings with Uruguayan & Argentinean human rights groups and the SOA Watch activists church worker Lisa Sullivan, torture survivor Carlos Mauricio and Maryknoll priest Reverend Roy Bourgeois.
“Everywhere we’ve traveled this month in South America, we’ve been amazed to realize that people are fully aware of the reality of the School of the Americas,” said Sullivan. “They have experienced firsthand the horrors of the tortures, detentions, imprisonments and ‘disappearances’ caused by its graduates.”
Argentina and Uruguay become the second and third countries to announce a cessation of training at the SOA/ WHINSEC. In January of 2004, Hugo Chavez announced that Venezuela would no longer send troops to train at the school.
The decisions of the South American countries come at a critical time in the campaign to close the U.S. Army institution. Legislation introduced last year by Rep. McGovern (D-MA) that would suspend activities at the SOA/ WHINSEC and call for a review of foreign military training in Latin America will come to the floor for a vote as early as May. The bill currently has 126 bi-partisan co-sponsors.
The SOA/ WHINSEC made headlines in 1996 when the Pentagon released training manuals used at the school that advocated torture, extortion and execution. Despite this shocking admission and hundreds of documented human rights abuses connected to soldiers trained at the school, no independent investigation into the training facility has ever taken place.
“To Latin Americans, the SOA/ WHINSEC represents nothing but the gravest violations,” said Reverend Bourgeois, founder of SOA Watch. “No amount of reforms will repair those relationships. We must close this school if we want to show that the United States is serious about human rights.”
by SOA Watch (www.soaw.org)