News
Release
QUAKER ORGANIZATION CALLS FOR END TO GOVERNMENT
SPYING
AFSC Says Surveillance of Peace Groups is "Outrageous"
PHILADELPHIA - December 19 - An organization
at the forefront of combating illegal FBI surveillance tactics
in the seventies now urges Congress to undertake a complete and
thorough review of reports that the Pentagon is spying on "peaceful anti-war
and counter-military recruitment groups."
Calling it a "new McCarthyism," the American Friends Service
Committee (AFSC) also likened the troublesome revelation to
the notorious COINTELPRO, an acronym for Counter Intelligence
Program - the covert FBI project aimed at undercutting Vietnam
anti-war organizing and the civil rights movement. COINTELPRO
was publicly unmasked through congressional hearings in 1975,
leading to stronger congressional oversight of federal law enforcement.
Many of the protections instituted then have been eroded in recent
years under the USA PATRIOT Act and other domestic surveillance
activities authorized by the President. Concerned Americans are
encouraged to write their Congressional representatives in Washington.
"Clearly the constitutional right of free speech and peaceful
assembly is not a criminal offense," states Mary Ellen
McNish, general secretary of AFSC, an international social
justice organization and co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. "It's
an outrage."
Early last week, NBC reported the existence of a secret Department
of Defense (DOD) database related to "potential terrorist threats." One
example of identified "threats" is a group in Lake
Worth, Florida that included five Quakers and a 79-year old grandmother
who met at their local Quaker meeting house to discuss how to protest
military recruiting at an area high school. Other examples of "threatening" events
in the database included handing out literature in front of military
recruiting stations and commemorating the second anniversary of
the Iraq War.
At least four of the events listed were activities coordinated
or supported by AFSC.
The report by NBC News was followed last Friday by a story in
the New York Times that President Bush has secretly authorized the
National Security Agency to eavesdrop on Americans and others inside
the U.S. without court-approved warrants. The President and the
DOD now admit they've been spying on thousands of people in this
country for simply exercising their constitutional rights.
Additionally, the ACLU recently released documents obtained under
the Freedom of Information Act that show the FBI 'Joint Terrorism
Task Force' is recording the names and license plate numbers of
peaceful protesters.
"We must not forget that it was not so long ago that COINTELPRO
was infiltrating student groups illegally and plotting against 'radical'
activists such as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.," states Joyce
Miller, AFSC assistant general secretary for justice and human rights. "We
must take action now to see that history doesn't repeat itself."
"This new wave of spying can only be seen as a threat to
our constitutional rights to free speech and the freedom of assembly," McNish
adds. "We have a fundamental right to speak our minds and organize
on the issues of the day."
Recently AFSC legally challenged similar surveillance activities
in Denver, Colorado, Chicago and other communities.
"In Denver, the courts agreed with us then that spying, not
free speech, is a threat, as they did during the Vietnam War, when
we helped win guarantees that our military will not spy on Americans," McNish
observes.
Under the Freedom of Information Act, AFSC secured hundreds
of federal files detailing government surveillance projects and
intelligence documents targeting U.S. peace groups in the early
70s. Public exposure of the Pentagon papers, FBI files and other
documents gave a glimpse of the vast extent of surveillance, record
keeping and disruptive (and sometimes lethal) activity carried on
by government intelligence agencies, from the CIA and FBI down to
local police against large numbers of American citizens.
"It is imperative that we uphold the Bill of Rights and not
trample the very principles upon which our country was founded,
especially now - when war rages on in Iraq, and anxiety
about terrorism causes fear and suspicion of our fellow citizens," McNish
commented. "This is the great lesson learned from the mistakes
of World War II and the unjust internment of our Japanese neighbors
and fellow citizens."
Historically, members of the Religious Society of Friends
(Quakers) have been known for 'speaking truth to power,' hence becoming
the subject of suspicion and at times violence because of their
pacifism. Friends have worked to assist runaway slaves and have
been prominent in the civil rights movement. The American Friends
Service Committee, along with the British Friends Service Council,
was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of the humanitarian
work of Quakers during and after World Wars I and II. With
national headquarters in Philadelphia, AFSC has offices across
the United States and in 22 countries of the world working for peace,
indigenous and immigrant rights and a host of social and economic
justice issues.
For more information, including ways to write Congressional representatives
to vocalize concerns about government spying, visit the AFSC web
at afsc.org.
# # #
The American Friends Service Committee is a Quaker organization that includes people of various faiths who are committed to social justice, peace and humanitarian service. Its work is based on the belief in the worth of every person and faith in the power of love to overcome violence and injustice.
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