Source: Daily Arizona Star Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com/ Pubdate: Tue, 19 May 1998 Authors: Isabel Garcia and Demetria Martinez TEEN'S DEATH ILLUSTRATES THE DANGER OF BORDER MILITARIZATION This month, families across the country will gather to celebrate their children's graduations. But one family, instead of marking a son's high school achievements, will observe the one-year anniversary of his death. On May 20, 1997, Esequiel Hernandez of the border town of Redford, Texas, became the first U.S. citizen killed by U.S. troops on U.S. soil since Kent State. The high school senior was stalked, shot and left to bleed to death by a four-member Marine unit in camouflage. He had been tending his goats as he did each day after school, carrying his grandfather's antique .22 to protect the animals from dog attacks. The Marines' faces were blackened and their bodies were covered with burlap and material from bushes. Ironically, a Marine recruiting poster hung in the boy's room. Hernandez was known for his steller performance in school, his respect for authority and for his deep religious faith. The troops were part of the elite drug-fighting unit, Joint Task Force Six (JTF6), established under the Bush administration as part of a program called Operation Alliance. JTF6 provides all manner of support for the U.S. Border Patrol, allegedly for drug-interdiction efforts in the border region and beyond. Support includes electronic intelligence, raid planning and weapons and interrogation techniques. Much of what these operations involve are known only to high Pentagon officials, as JTF6 has no external reporting requirement. Timothy Dunn, in his book ``The Militarization of the U.S.-Mexico Border, 1978-1992: Low Intensity Conflict Doctrine Comes Home,'' documents the way the Border Patrol has adopted military rhetoric, strategy and technology as part of an overall low-intensity warfare framework. He estimates that at any given time there are 200 to 300 troops, and on occasion up to 900 troops, deployed to the border. This does not include National Guard troops. Hernandez's death so galvanized human rights groups across the country that the Pentagon was forced temporarily to withdraw armed troops. The Redford Citizens Committee for Justice went to Washington D.C. where they met with high-level officials such as Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey, Immigration and Naturalization Service Commissioner Doris Meissner and Assistant Secretary of Defense H. Allen Holmes. They also met with the Hispanic Caucus and Rep. James A. Traficant Jr., D-Ohio, who advocates the deployment of 10,000 troops to the border (at a cost of $650 million a year, according to the Defense Department's estimate). For years civil and human rights organizations have been documenting the mounting law enforcement abuses along the border that have victimized both U.S. citizens, legal residents and undocumented persons alike. Countless reports have been issued by the American Friends Service Committee, Americas Watch and the Advisory Committees of Arizona, California, Texas and New Mexico to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. These groups fear that Hernandez's death is just the beginning of a new wave of violence in the border regions as the line between military and civilian law enforcmenet continues to blur. For more than 100 years, the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 protected U.S. citizens from having their own military used against them. This statute has been changed by three administrations from 1981 to the present time, weakening the letter and the spirit of an act so fundamental to the liberties we enjoy and that so much of the world envies. On the one-year anniversary of Hernandez's death, human rights and religious groups across the country will pray for Ezequiel's family and call upon the U.S. government to permanently end all military operations in the border region. We must seek true solutions to the problems that plague our communities. We must redirect precious resources toward the health and well-being, not the destruction, of our young people. Attorney Isabel Garcia and novelist Demetria Martinez are members of Derechos Humanos Coalition of Arizona, a human and civil rights monitoring and educational project in Southern Arizona. The anniversary of Hernandez's death will be observed with an interfaith service tomorrow at 7 p.m. at El Tiradito, next to El Minuto Restaurant. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)