Students to protest Ga. combat school

(From left to right) Cara Watton Jr., junior in FAA, Lindsay Millette, sophomore in LAS, Camille Griffin Jr., junior in Education, and Dan Brencic, sophomore in AHS, listen in about the SOA protest, which will begin Friday. Laura Prusik

(From left to right) Cara Watton Jr., junior in FAA, Lindsay Millette, sophomore in LAS, Camille Griffin Jr., junior in Education, and Dan Brencic, sophomore in AHS, listen in about the SOA protest, which will begin Friday. Laura Prusik

By Megan Kelly

Lisa Pickert doesn’t want her tax dollars used to fund the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, a combat training school for Latin American soldiers in Fort Benning, Ga.

The U.S.-funded institute, formerly known as the School of Americas, has graduated more than 60,000 soldiers since its establishment in 1946. According to the School of Americas Watch, an independent organization that aims to close down the school, many of these soldiers have since been linked to the torture, rape, assassination, kidnapping and massacres of hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans, most notably the assassination of the Archbishop Oscar Romero in 1980.

Pickert, junior in LAS, hosted a teach-in recently at Allen Hall to inform students about the school and to encourage them to attend the School of Americas protest, which takes place Friday through Sunday in Fort Benning. The event draws more than 20,000 people annually.

Lee Rials, public affairs officer for the institute, said in an e-mail that the protest is based on a false premise and the school is not responsible for crimes committed by former students.

“There is not one example of anyone using what he learned at the school to commit a crime,” Rials said in an e-mail. “Saying so with no evidence is tantamount to libel of the soldiers who taught at the school.”

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Rials also said there will be a tour of the school Saturday so protesters can see the building and speak with the institute’s leaders. He said he expects about 750 people to attend.

Rev. Don Coleman is the 70-year-old co-pastor of University Church, a Chicago congregation associated with the United Church of Christ and the Disciples of Christ. Last year he attended the protest and was arrested with 15 others after trespassing onto the school’s grounds in hopes of attracting attention to the institution.

After his arrest he spent two months in a Chicago correctional center.

“I am very committed to trying to get this school closed, and my experience is that this is one way to pressure (the government) to do it,” Coleman said.

Pickert believes that Congress has not closed the institute because it has a separate agenda.

“The school functions as a tool for our country’s corporate interests in terms of the exploitation of labor and natural resources in Latin America,” Pickert said. “By training Latin American soldiers to oppress their own people, it allows the U.S. to officially stay out of those countries.”

Joao Da Silva, communications coordinator for the School of Americas Watch, said he thinks the school may close in the future because Latin American countries are gradually withdrawing soldiers from the school as their governments are growing more democratic.

Pickert said she believes the school could be closed if more people are taught how it functions and put pressure on Congress. She has organized a small group of students to attend the protest, but said there is still time for other interested students to participate.

“My expectations for the protest are two days of peaceful, nonviolent demonstration as people from all over the country will join together and voice themselves against the SOA and the oppressive U.S. foreign policy,” Pickert said.