Belafonte Continues Tirade Against
Bush
Yahoo News/AP
By VERENA DOBNIK,
January 21, 2006
NEW YORK - Entertainer Harry Belafonte, one of the Bush administration's
harshest critics, compared the Homeland Security Department to the Nazi Gestapo
on Saturday and attacked the president as a liar.
"We've come to this dark time in which the new Gestapo of Homeland Security
lurks here, where citizens are having their rights suspended," Belafonte said
in a speech to the annual meeting of the Arts Presenters Members
Conference.
"You can be arrested and not charged. You can be arrested and have no right
to counsel," said Belafonte.
Belafonte's remarks on Saturday — part of a 45-minute speech on the
role of the arts in a politically changing world — were greeted with a
roaring standing ovation from an audience which included singer Peter Yarrow of
the folk group Peter, Paul and Mary, and members of the arts community from
several dozen countries.
He had called President Bush "the greatest terrorist in the world" during a
trip to Venezuela two weeks ago. Belafonte, 78, made that comment after a
meeting with Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez.
The Harlem-born Belafonte, who was raised in Jamaica, said his activism was
inspired by an impoverished mother "who imbued in me that we should never
capitulate to oppression."
He acknowledged that the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks demanded a
reaction by the United States, but said the policies of the Bush administration
were not the right response.
"Fascism is fascism. Terrorism is terrorism. Oppression is oppression," said
Belafonte, who served in the U.S. Navy during World War II.
Bush, he said, rose to power "somewhat dubiously and ... then lies to the
people of this nation, misleads them, misinstructs, and then sends off hundreds
of thousands of our own boys and girls to a foreign land that has not aggressed
against us."
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