Boricua Popular Army
The Boricua Popular Army —or Ejército Popular Boricua in Spanish— is a clandestine political organization based on the island of Puerto Rico, with cells throughout the United States. They campaign for and support the independence of Puerto Rico from what they characterize as United States colonial rule.
Although the group has claimed responsibility for numerous armed robberies and bombings since 1978, and is still led by Filiberto Ojeda Rios, a former FBI Most Wanted Fugitive, they have refocused their resources and networks to political, information and enforcement support for the general independence and nationalist movement.
Also known as Los Macheteros (or 'The Machete Wielders' in English) and 'Puerto Rican Popular Army', their active membership of mostly Puerto Rican men and women have swelled to over 850 active members (as of 2003), with an unknown number of supporters, sympathizers, collaborators and informants, with cells (usually consisting of 6 to 8 members) in the United States, and other countries.
Members of this group are called Macheteros (plural) or Machetero (singular).
Background
Los Macheteros were organized in the 1970s by Filiberto Ojeda Rios, Juan Enrique Segarra Palmer and Orlando Gonzalez Claudio. The group began in 1976, but it can trace its origins back to the Armed Forces of National Liberation (FALN).
Upon its beginnings, the group attracted a wide variety of Puerto Ricans, including members of:
- University Pro-Independence Federation of Puerto Rico (FUPI)
- Movement Pro Independence of Puerto Rico (MPI)
- Puerto Rican Independence Party
- pro-independence activists
It should be noted that only some members of the above groups support the Macheteros ideology. For example, the Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP) has a similar political ideology but they follow protocol of the insular political system, based on the Free Associated State laws established in 1952.
Notable acts / incidents
1970s
In January 2, 1977 one day after Carlos Romero Barcelo, a statehood advicate, was sworn in as Governor of Puerto Rico, two bombs were placed at an ROTC building in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The bombs were successfully destroyed by the police, but the Macheteros took responsibility for the incident.
1980s
In a January 1981 attack, Macheteros commandos infiltrated a Puerto Rican Air National Guard base and blew up 11 planes, causing approximately $45 million in damages.
However, their most famous act (likely because it took place in the U.S., and it directly dealt with money) was a Wells Fargo depot robbery of approximately $7 million in West Hartford, Connecticut (USA) in September 12, 1983. The group's code name for the robbery was "White Eagle" (or "Águila Blanca" in Spanish).
After the robbery, the Macheteros threw some of the robbed money to the air from high floor buildings and kept the remaining sum to fund the robbery operation. It was a symbolic protest against the “greed-infested men and mechanisms which strain our elected officials, government agencies, and social aspirations in this country, as well as in Puerto Rico,” according to a written statement from the Macheteros.
By Puerto Rican, American, and international laws the act was considered as terrorist due to the way it was executed and the experience suffered by the Wells Fargo security guards.
The United States FBI charges for this robbery include: Aggravated Robbery, Aggravated Robbery of Federally Insured Bank Funds, Armed Robbery, and Conspiracy to Interfere With Commerce By Robbery.
See also: White Eagle: the Wells Fargo depot robbery.
1990s
In the 1990s Los Macheteros claimed responsibility on a bomb explosion that occurred in a small power station in the Puerto Rican metropolitan area. The explosion damages left some Puerto Ricans without electricity.
In that same decade, the group also vandalized a new fleet of government vans and trucks that were parked in a government facility. The damages left the automobiles non-operative.
Terrorists or Puerto Rican patriots?
According to the U.S. Government, Los Macheteros are considered terrorists for the methods they have employed to further their agenda. While many Puerto Ricans consider Los Macheteros to be terrorists and unpatriotic, there are are some 'quiet' sympathizers, who also believe that Puerto Rico's 'inability' to sustain itself was designed by the U.S. Government, 'corporate America,' and Puerto Rico's own upper class and industrial leaders in order to create a perpetual consumer base for U.S. and foreign products and services (Foreign products and services are redirected to Puerto Rico and other ‘unincorporated’ lands of the United States to satisfy a portion of foreign trade agreements, while allowing domestic products and services greater “home” market share). Supporters of independence in Puerto Rico poll a small electoral minority (under 10%) when status plebiscites are held.
Other supporters argue that their struggle is just a continuity of the hundred years clandestine war Puerto Ricans have fought against United States policies in the island, such as the Culebra and Vieques bombing range; the disproportionate number of military bases (compared to most states in the Union); the population control experiments of the 1960s (where a third of all the women in Puerto Rico were sterilized); the FBI and CIA assassinations of independence and nationalist leaders (including the alleged murder of Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, by means of radiation experiments while he was incarcerated); and what they would characterize as the infamous Dr. Rhoades cancer "treatments", during which Doctor Cornelius P. Rhoades admitted to killing eight Puerto Rican patients and injecting cancer cells on others as part of a medical investigation conducted in San Juan's Presbyterian Hospital for the Rockefeller Institute, secret testing of Agent Orange on Puerto Rican soil, etc.
As a 'terrorist' group, Los Macheteros have claimed the least amount of innocent/civilian lives when compared to most paramilitary, terrorist or other organized insurgency groups of its kind, type, size and history (according to U.S. Federal documents). They claim to regard the U.S. working class with as much respect as to their own people (although, technically, they are considered U.S. citizens as well). They claim that their 'war' is with the U.S. Government policies and politicians that continue to exploit the people and resources of Puerto Rico (also known as 'Borinquen,' or 'Boriken, from the original Taino -- native indians of the Caribbean language), an island with a population comparable to the Republic of Ireland, but just over an eighth its size. Although most Puerto Ricans reject violence as a political means, many believe that the economic and political exploitation and oppression of Puerto Rico continues to fuel the activities of many insurgent groups.
Also, many political groups opposed to U.S. dominion of Puerto Rico agree that the U.S. invasion and occupation during the Spanish-American War in 1898 was illegal and unjustified, just like many other U.S. military operations throughout Latin America in the 20th century. Although there were Spanish troops in the island, Puerto Rico had been granted a form of sovereignty from the Spanish Crown months before the USS Maine incident in Cuba, which the United States used as grounds to declare war against Spain.
Famous group members
| Name | Remarks |
|---|---|
| Antonio Camacho Negron | released from imprisonment by Bill Clinton's clemency |
| Filiberto Ojeda Rios | co-founder current leader |
| Juan Enrique Segarra Palmer | co-founder |
| Orlando Gonzalez Claudio | co-founder |
| Victor Manuel Gerena | former FBI's 10 Most Wanted Fugitives inside man for the Wells Cargo depot robbery |
References
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (USA).FBI Fugitive Profile: Filiberto Ojeda Rios (http://www.fbi.gov/mostwant/fugitive/nov2003/novrios.htm) (2003). United States of America.
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (USA).FBI Fugitive Profile: Victor Manuel Gerena (http://www.fbi.gov/mostwant/topten/fugitives/gerena.htm). United States of America.
See also
- Clinton FALN clemency
- FBI ten most wanted fugitives
External link
- FBI's Most Wanted Fugitives - November 2003 (http://www.fbi.gov/mostwant/fugitive/nov2003/nov03fug.htm) (Ojeda Rios listed)
- Photo of damage from January 1981 attack on Puerto Rican Air National Guard (http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/puertorico/macheteros-81.jpg)