>From MCELROY@zodiac.rutgers.edu Sun May  2 19:49:38 1993

                      URGENT ACTION REQUEST
              GERRY ADAMS VISA DECISION DUE SHORTLY

     The decision on the visa application of Sinn Fein President
Gerry Adams to visit the United States is believed due very
shortly. You, your friends etc must call your Member of Congress
and Senators and certainly President Clinton as soon as you get
this notice. Telegrams are okay, but there is no time for
letters: the best method to write may be by fax. Please do not
wait to act. Call as many activists as you can and have them call
within their circle of contacts.

PHONE #s:

House of Representitves switchboard--1-202-255-3121
Senate Switchboard--1-202-224-3121
White House--1-202-456-1414

TELEGRAMS:

(call switchboards for office number of your
representative/senator)

Senate--The Senate, Washington DC  20510
House--The House of Representatives, Washington DC 20515
White House--1600 Pennsylvania Ave, Washington DC  20500

FAX:

The White House 1-202-456-2461

                           **********

An Irish Northern Aid Committee Information Paper...

              U.S. Government Policy of Censorship
          Through Denial of Visas to Irish Republicans

     The United States Government has for the past 17 years
     excluded members of the Sinn Fein Party in Ireland from
                   entering the United States

*WHAT IS SINN FEIN?
     Sinn Fein is Ireland's oldest active political party and is
associated with the traditional aspirations of Irish
Republicanism, i.e., a united, 32 county nation with guaranteed
freedoms and rights for all of its citizens. It represents a
prominent segment of opinion in the north of Ireland which must
be considered to have a true picture of the conflict there.
Approximately 40 percent of the total Nationalist vote in the
North goes to Sinn Fein candidates. It is, for example, the
second largest party in terms of seats in the Belfast City
Council.
     
*U.S. VISA DENIAL POLICY:
     Virtually all prominent members of Sinn Fein have been
denied visas to enter the United States to express their
viewpoints in spite of America's fundamental principles of
freedom of speech and association and our right to relevant
information.
     Since 1974, Gerry Adams, twice elected Member of British
Parliament and President of Sinn Fein; Owen Carron, an incumbent
member of Parliament; Derry City Councilor Hugh Brady; Tyrone
Councilor Pearse McAleer; leading labor union official and Sinn
Fein member Phil Flynn; the editor of Ireland's largest political
weekly newspaper Danny Morrison; Sinn Fein executive officers
Thomas Hartley and Joseph Cahill. and Sinn Fein Press Officer Joe
Austin, and many others have been denied visas to enter the US to
present their cases to the American people after having been
invited to do so.

*MEMBERS OF CONGRESS DENIED:
     There are many embarrassing illustrations of this policy. In
Feb. 1985, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher addressed a
full session of Congress and spoke specifically about the British
presence in Ireland. Ten Congress members invited Mr. Adams to
reply. The State Dept. denied him a visa thereby denying members
of Congress from having the opportunity to question Mr. Adams, a
Member of Parliament, and to have such information available in
exercising their Congressional judgement regarding foreign
policy.
     Mr. Adams has been invited by the Massachusetts Assembly and
Michigan Senate, the New York Irish American Legislators
Association, the Philadelphia and Southern California Brehon
Society of Lawyers and Judges, many colleges and universities,
Irish American and scores of other organizations. Each time the
right of American citizens were contravened by the State
Department's Irish censorship policy.

*McCARREN-WALTER ACT
     Recent reforms in the McCarron-Walter Act, passed during the
McCarthy War in the 1950's have not altered policy with regard to
Irish Republicans. In spite of these changes, the State Dept.
still excludes Gerry Adams, a man never convicted of a crime
anywhere. This policy makes a mockery of the protection against
arbitrary and unfair visa denials decided by the Supreme Court in
'Kleindiest vs. Mandel'. 


     Gerry Adams can and does walk the streets of London and
Dublin and the capitols of Europe, yet the US government denies
its citizens from meeting with him to discuss issues of mutual
interest and concern.
     For the past 15-plus years, because of our government's
policy of visa denial, Americans have been given a slanted, one-
sided view of that conflict. If the State Dept. through its
bureaucracy can manipulate American public opinion by allowing
only into  this country voices which it wishes to be supported,
while censoring all other viewpoints, then our government will
have usurped the right of the people to control foreign policy.

          
for further info on Ireland on Peacenet, see 'reg.ireland'.
