2.05.2009

update on war resister cliff cornell

From Gerry Condon of Project Safe Haven.
U.S. War Resister Deported From Canada
AWOL GI Held in Whatcom County Jail

U.S. war resister Cliff Cornell surrendered himself to U.S. border police on Wednesday after being ordered to leave Canada. He was promptly arrested for being AWOL from the U.S. Army, and is now being held at the Whatcom County Jail in Bellingham, Washington, twenty miles south of the U.S.-Canada border.

Cornell's attorney and supporters expressed outrage at the arrest.

"Clifford Cornell came back to the United States so that he could voluntarily return to his old unit at Fort Stewart," stated attorney James Branum. "He stated this intention to the Border Patrol, both verbally and in writing, by way of a letter I drafted on his behalf. I am disappointed that the Border Patrol chose to arrest my client and place him into a county jail with general population prisoners. This should not have happened."

Cornell, 28, fled to Canada four years ago after his Army artillery unit was ordered to Iraq. But despite a popular outcry to provide sanctuary to soldiers who refuse to fight in illegal wars, Canada's Conservative government is pressing ahead with deportations. Cornell, an Arkansas native, had come to call British Columbia home. But he now faces a possible court martial and imprisonment in the United States.

"Cliff Cornell should not be going to jail," said Gerry Condon, director of Project Safe Haven, a war resister advocacy group. "He had the guts to follow his conscience and obey international law. ... President Obama should grant amnesty to Cliff Cornell and all war resisters."

Cornell is the second Iraq War resister to be held in the Whatcom County Jail. He follows Robin Long, who was deported from Canada in July. Long is now serving a 15-month prison sentence at Miramar Naval Consolidated Brig near San Diego.

"We want Bellingham to be a Sanctuary City for war resisters," said Gene Marx of Veterans For Peace, "not a way station for war resisters being sent to prison."

Bellingham is known for being a progressive city, having passed two anti-war resolutions through its city council.

A public vigil in support of Cliff Cornell will be held outside of the County jail [today] from 10 a.m. – 1 p.m., organized by the Whatcom Peace and Justice Center.

A legal defense fund for Cliff Cornell is being established by Courage To Resist, a war resister support group.

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