The Star Early Edition

Lopez Rivera finally gets his freedom

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PUERTO Rico’s independen­ce leader and longest held political prisoner in the US from Latin America will soon be set free, after his sentence was commuted by outgoing US President Barack Obama.

The United States government earlier announced the release of Oscar Lopez Rivera, who has been imprisoned in the US for 36 years for his struggle to free Puerto Rico from US colonial rule.

Obama commuted Lopez’s sentence, which will expire on May 17, according to a list of commutatio­ns announced by the White House.

Celebratio­ns started almost immediatel­y. Clarissa Lopez, daughter of Lopez, was to hold a press conference yesterday in reaction to his release at the Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Lopez was born in Puerto Rico in 1943 and upon returning to Chicago after serving in the Vietnam War, he joined the struggle for Puerto Rican rights.

He participat­ed in acts of civil disobedien­ce and other actions. In 1976, he joined the clandestin­e fight for the independen­ce of Puerto Rico as a member of the Armed Forces of National Liberation. In 1981, he was captured by the FBI and accused of “conspiracy” for his militancy in the FALN.

At the time of his capture, he proclaimed himself a prisoner of war, protected under the first protocol of the Geneva Convention of 1949. The protocol protects Lopez from prosecutio­n for having been arrested in a conflict against colonial occupation.

The US did not recognise Lopez’s demand and sentenced him to 55 years in prison and after an alleged attempt to escape, the sentence was increased to 70 years in prison, 12 of which he spent in solitary confinemen­t.

Former US president Bill Clinton in 1999 offered him a pardon, along with 13 FALN members who accepted, but Lopez rejected it because it included completing 10 more years in jail.

Leaders from around the world, as well as human rights organisati­ons, have demanded Lopez’s release for many years.

On June 18, 2012, the UN Decolonisa­tion Committee approved a resolution, promoted by Cuba, which called for the recognitio­n of Puerto Rico’s right to independen­ce and self-determinat­ion and urged the release of all pro-independen­ce prisoners in the US. Telesur

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? Oscar Lopez Rivera is driven to jail on July 25, 1981, after being convicted of seditious conspiracy in Chicago.
PICTURE: AP Oscar Lopez Rivera is driven to jail on July 25, 1981, after being convicted of seditious conspiracy in Chicago.

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