Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Dissenters Should Carry Wills Under Their Arms


Arce Gomez
146 reject Dissenters Should Carry Wills Under Their Arms

As Bolivian Interior Minister in the 1980's Arce Gomez abducted, tortured and murdered over 1000 of the dissidents who chimed their opposition to the Luis Garcia Meza regime. They dealt equally with priests, Congressmen, students and intellectuals.
Dissenters Should Carry Wills Under Their Arms

This is a warning from a war criminal. He could be any one of the tens of thousands of traitors, torturers and murderers who enjoy employment and protection from the Federal government. Is he one of the Republicans raking Sonia Maria Sotomayor over the coals of racism? Could he be one of the FBI Agents who sold atomic secrets to the Pakistanis?


As Bolivian Interior Minister in the 1980's Arce Gomez abducted, tortured and murdered over 1000 of the dissidents who chimed their opposition to the Luis Garcia Meza regime. They dealt equally with priests, Congressmen, students and intellectuals.


Drug trafficking was a pre-occupation of the Garcia Meza crew, and Arce Gomez played a big part. He was an innovator. He developed a government tax on coca leaf sold to traffickers and hired air taxis to bring the narcotics to the United States. This earned him extradition to the USA and a big jolt in prison from the American authorities.

Here, the Gomez story would have ended if it were not for the industrious prosecutors in Bolivia. They tried Arce Gomez in absentia convicting him of many crimes including murder. This allowed them to escort Gomez from his US prison to a Bolivian one.

Former Bolivian Interior Minister Luis Arce Gomez (2nd L) listens to his sentence of 30 years in prison in Chonchocoro jail July 13, 2009. Arce Gomez, wanted in Bolivia for crimes that include murder, human rights violations and genocide, was handed over to Bolivia by the U.S. on Thursday. - Bolivia's State Press Agency (ABI)

President Evo Morales thanked the US for deporting a figure whose name once inspired dread among leftists, trade unionists and journalists. "It is a historic day for human rights."

If you agree with President Morales, you are probably wondering how we can incarcerate the American versions of Arce Gomez. His circumstances suggest patience is in order. The DEA limited the charge to drug trafficking the easiest charge to prove in the USA. Arce Gomez was a vicious thug with fearsome colleagues such as Klaus Barbie. The Bolivians had to wait a while until tempers cooled on the other side. Then, they could go forward with the more controversial charges.

Today, we can see the South American leap into democracy is incomplete. The Peruvian government has seized the lands of indigenous people. They have parceled them out to private interests and they use the army to discourage dissent. In Honduras the right wingers have had the temerity to exile the democratically-elected President. They have ignored complaints from the UN and the OAS.

The actions taken against Arce Gomez should warn traitors in Peru, Honduras and the USA to desist from murderous exploits. There is no statute of limitations on murder. The present hostility towards human rights is subject to change. Individuals can initiate suits that can mushroom into class actions. Gradually, the evil doers will lose their grasp on due process.

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