by Matt Peppe /
January 12th, 2017
In the last full
week of Barack Obama’s eight year tenure as President of the United States of
America, dozens of political prisoners still sit in cages across
the nation’s prisons, rotting away as Obama consciously chooses not to exercise
the power to simply free them with the stroke of a pen. Many activists for
Puerto Rican independence, Native American and African American rights, and
other causes were targeted by the political police’s illegal COINTELPRO program
and convicted in sham trials. Now elderly, some in poor health, they may
effectively be facing death sentences unless Obama decides within the next two
weeks to grant their appeals for clemency.
Among the most well
known political prisoners are Oscar López Rivera, Leonard Peltier and Mumia Abu-Jamal, who have all been locked up
for at least three and a half decades. Many others including The Move 9 and The Holy Land Five have spent years or
decades in jail for their political action and views. Many, like Chelsea
Manning and Jeffrey Sterling, have been denied their freedom for exposing
government crimes and misdeeds.
But you won’t ever
hear this in the mainstream media. The corporate media hypocrisy is best
demonstrated by the debate regarding political prisoners during Obama’s trip to
Cuba in March 2016.
The U.S. government
pretends that it always promotes human rights around the world and opposes
human rights violations by other countries it considers adversaries. Hence,
part of the propaganda narrative on Cuba is that it unjustly holds political
prisoners as part of its campaign to repress the Cuban people – something that
would never occur in the United States itself.
During a joint
press conference with Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro, CNN’s Jim Acosta
asked Castro why the Cuban government held political prisoners and whether he
would release them. Castro responded by asking for the names of people Acosta
was referring to, and said that if he was given a list, they would be free by
that evening. Acosta did not name anyone. CNN declared that Castro “skirts question on political
prisoners.” The press coverage treated it as self-evident that only the Cuban
government should have to defend itself against allegations of human rights abuses.
It was taken for granted that the U.S. President would not have to answer the
same question.
By the time the
meeting between Obama and Castro took place, all detainees in Cuba considered
by Amnesty International prisoners of conscience had already been released. Meanwhile, Amnesty has
directly called on Obama to free Leonard Peltier. They have produced multiple reports on his case. However, no news
organization questioned why an American reporter who covers the U.S. President
every day had never bothered asking Obama – before or during the press
conference in Cuba – about U.S. political prisoners.
When I asked Acosta
via Twitter why he was silent about
U.S. political prisoners and whether he would call on Obama to free Peltier, he
did not respond. In the following months, he has not responded to multiple inquiries
about his refusal to ask the same questions of his own President that he does
of leaders of foreign countries.
Many journalists
working in the American mainstream media see themselves as being on the same
team as their own government, safely staying on the side of U.S. power by
acting as a mouthpiece to promote the government’s own narrative and only
opposing those countries and leaders that the U.S. government declares
adversaries.
As the corporate
press refuses to acknowledge that the U.S. has political prisoners, it is left
to grassroots groups to demand justice. Recently, separate petitions calling
for clemency for López Rivera and Peltier were created through the White
House’s We the People web site, where citizen petitions that receive 100,000
signatures receive a response from the White House.
Both petitions
exceeded the threshold and received the same dismissive response, which passed the buck to the
Department of Justice’s Pardon Attorney and refused to comment on the
individual cases:
The President takes
his constitutional power to grant clemency very seriously, and recommendations
from the Department of Justice are carefully considered before decisions are
made. The White House does not comment, however, on individual pardon
applications. In accordance with this policy and the We the People Terms of
Participation – which explain that the White House may sometimes choose not to
respond to petitions addressing certain matters – the White House declines to
comment on the specific case addressed in this petition.
Translation: The
President doesn’t actually respect citizens’ right to participate in decision
making, and feels free to ignore them whenever he chooses. The We the People
web site is merely a propaganda tool to give the illusion that the president is
accountable to the citizens he purportedly serves.
Indeed, Obama has
closed his eyes and ears and shut out the voices of millions of people who have
spent his entire presidency calling on him to show basic human decency and stop
the perpetration of historic injustices against López, Peltier, Abu-Jamal and
many other political prisoners.
Throughout his
term, Obama has been called on by fellow Nobel Peace
Prize laureates, foreign leaders, Puerto Rican politicians and others to free
López Rivera. The case has become perhaps the most important political issue on
the island, as well as among Puerto Ricans and allies in the diaspora.
Former President
Jimmy Carter, who commuted the prison sentences of
four Puerto Rican nationalists, including Lolita Lebron and Rafael Cancel
Miranda, who participated in attacks on the Blair House and the U.S. House of
Representatives in the early 1950s, recently asked Obama to free López Rivera,
as he himself had done for Puerto Rican prisoners convicted of more serious
charges. (Carter’s December 13 letter to Obama was not reported in any American
mainstream outlet, only in Puerto Rican press such as El Nuevo Dia.)
Puerto Ricans who
are denied their right to self-determination and relegated to second-class
citizenship have been unrelenting in continuing to demand that Obama grant
López Rivera his freedom, despite years of being ignored by Washington.
Massive rallies have
been held annually in San Juan and across the island on the anniversary of
López Rivera’s incarceration each May. The group 35 Mujeres por Oscar (35 Women
for Oscar) holds regular gatherings, the most recent on January 6 for López’s birthday. A branch of the group in New
York City does the same.
A demonstration in
October in front of the White House was attended by nearly 1,000 people – many
who took buses from Philadelphia and New York City – who rallied for López
Rivera. Puerto Rican recording artist René Pérez (AKA Residente of the band
Calle 13), said that the government of the United States should be seeking
forgiveness from Oscar López Rivera and the people of Puerto Rico, rather than
the other way around. His speech is worth quoting at length:
We’re here in the
United States of America, in front of the government that has enslaved us for
more than 100 years. The government that in exchange for a passport took our
families to its wars. The government that experimented with our people, since
they came implanting its language by force. The government that performed
medical experiments on our grandparents injecting them with cancerous cells.
The government that experimented with anticonceptive pills on our island. We,
who understand [López Rivera’s] fight, are here to tell this government – the
only government in the history of humanity to fire atomic bombs – that they
have in prison a hero much braver than Washington. That this hero has been
imprisoned longer than Mandela. That this hero became a hero without hoping for
anything in return. We, who understand the fight of Oscar López are in front of
the White House to tell this government that every additional second Oscar
López spends in prison converts him in a hero much bigger than any of the
heroes the United States has had. We are here to tell this government that even
though the history books don’t tell us the real history that includes heroes
like Oscar López, we will take charge of telling it. We, who understand the
fight of Oscar López, are here to tell this government that we will never ask
forgiveness for defending our right to be free. So we don’t ask them to forgive
Oscar, but that they recognize the true history of the world, that they
recognize the history of Puerto Rico, and maybe some day, after they free
Oscar, we will forgive them.
Obama has chosen to
ignore the massive injustice committed against political prisoners in American
gulags while lecturing others that people shouldn’t
be imprisoned for their political beliefs. He either refuses to acknowledge or
refuses to care that the government he leads can – and often does – use the
legal system punitively to silence those whose political views and actions
threaten its perpetuation of the status quo, and to intimidate others into
abandoning resistance. As Pérez said, perhaps someday people will forgive him.
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