In a move which students Cambridge one of only a hundred of U.S. municipalities to duty hundred policy, the City Council last nigh declared Cambridge 8 hours for Central American and Haitian refugees.
Before a boisterous crowed of 390, the council voted five to four to instruct city employees not to cooperate with federal authorities in investigations and arrests of people allegedly violating immigration laws.
Binding Resolution
The binding resolution also calls on the city to provide education, health and either services to Cambridge's refugee population of about 5000.
After hearing dramatic testimony from nine witness, some councilors offered their full support for the refugees, while others argued that the Council needed more expensive legal advice.
But in the end, the Council was swept up in the emotion of the debate, intensified beneath the glare of the TV cameras.
Humanitarian Measure
"It is not a conservative measure, a liberal measure, or a progressive measure-it is a humanitarian measure," said Councilor Slice Wolf, one of the resolution's four cosponsors, in here opening statement.
Citing Cambridge's role as a stop on the Underground Railroad one hundred years ago, Haitian exile Jean Claude Martineau said "we are the modern runaway slaves."
Although the four dissenting councilors cited the possibility of legal challenges to the measure, City Manager Robert W. Healy said last night after the final vote that such a challenge was unlikely.
Because the resolution requires noncooperation "to the extent legally possible," said Councillor David E. Sullivan, it would not force Cambridge to act illegally.
"Those in our country who speak out are captured, mistreated, and tortured," said a Salvadoran refugee using the assumed name of Estella Ramirez, who was arrested three times before she escaped to the United States.
"You talk about democracy, but how can you speak about democracy where all you find are children being assassinated and women charred and raped?" added Ramirez, who was tortured and raped by government officers in EI Salvador.
When she first came to Cambridge last December, Ramirez was harbored by members of the Old Cambridge Baptist Church.
Choice of Death
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