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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Ft. Benning. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Ft. Benning. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Group Offers Soldiers Low-Cost Housing Loans

"Soldiers who protect the American dream can now get help buying into the American dream," according to a Columbus housing association.

NeighborWorks Columbus, a local organization that supports low-cost housing, says the organization's new Hallock Soldiers Fund offers counseling, down-payment assistance and low-interest loans.

NeighborWorks President Kathy Williams says the aid is specifically aimed at Ft. Benning personnel:

"We're trying to assist the lower-ranking soldier families, especially those who are going to be coming to Ft. Benning through the BRAC process. moving around from base-to-base for soldiers can often create for soldiers, obstacles to home ownership... it gives them an opportunity to really be able to invest in the community and build an asset for their family.”
Williams says none of the 483 Columbus residents who have taken part in the Neighborworks assistance program in the last five years have fallen into foreclosure.

Military homebuyers who have utilized the fund, NeighborWorks and Ft. Benning officials will be available for details at a press conference on-post on Friday at 1:30 pm. The event will be held at 7371 Ingersoll Street.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of Ft. Benning and the BRAC realignment.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Feds detain illegal workers at Nat'l Infantry Museum


National Infantry Museum, under construction in June, 2007.
(Dave Bender)

Federal law-enforcement officials arrested 30 undocumented workers at Columbus's National Infantry Museum, under construction adjacent to Ft. Benning earlier this week.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained the construction workers at the site on Tuesday, Oct. 30. Agents caught two who tried to flee.

Museum spokesperson Cyndy Cerbin says the workers were not on the base itself:

“The National Infantry Museum is being built on property owned by the National Infantry Foundation, and it is not federal property – part of Ft. Benning.”
Ft. Benning's Public Affairs Office refused to comment on the case, and directed all inquires to Batson-Cook, general contractors for the museum.

Eddie Sanders, site project manager for Batson-Cook, says his company is cooperating with federal authorities on the case. Sanders says the workers were employed by subcontractors "to perform various trades on the project," and not by Batson-Cook:
"Batson-Cook files all federal, state and local laws, as well as our subcontractors regarding hiring practices."
Sanders says the workers "are innocent until proven guilty," and were not on Ft. Benning property at any time. He declined to name the subcontractors, only saying that, "Since they [ICE] are conducting an investigation, we would not be able to release that information at this time."

Project Executive Paul Meadows told the Ledger-Enquirer newspaper that those arrested worked as masons, fireproofing, and metal stud tradesmen and included local and out-of-town subcontractors.

Referring to the subcontractors, Sanders said, "There are several contractors we work with frequently," adding, "...they abide by the federal, state and local laws and regulations."

Sanders said that the number of workers, including subcontractors and employees on-site averaged "from 75 to 90 -- right around there. It kind of fluctuates from day-to-day."

Richard Rocha, a spokesman for ICE says the detainees are mostly from Mexico:
“Most of the people apprehended on Tuesday are from Mexico. There are 27 from Mexico, three from Guatemala, Those individuals will be processed throught the immigration court system...”
Seven of them were arraigned today, several on charges that included illegal re-entry, misuse of a social security number, and fraudulent use of an alien registration card, according to US Georgia Middle District attorney Max Wood in Macon.

The detainees were taken to the Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, and will face deportation hearings in coming days.

The museum is set to open next year.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of the National Infantry Museum.

Click here for GPB coverage of immigrant affairs.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

'Warfighters' gather at Ft. Benning


Ft. Benning: honor guard at Airborne Walk, with jump towers in background. (Dave Bender)

Fort Benning gears up to host the annual Infantry Warfighting Conference this Tuesday through Thursday. Top Army brass will be in attendance, as well as a bevy of military guests.

A Columbus resident, who is recognized in the Ranger Hall of Fame, will receive an award. Post commander Maj. Gen. Walt Wojdakowski is slated to deliver an address on the "State of the Infantry."

Other senior and field commanders are set to discuss, inter alia, the coming BRAC realignment project, and their experiences in combat with renovated, "modular" force deployments. Over a hundred distributors and organizations will display their wares during the event.

Click here for more on the conference. Click here for more GPB News coverage and features about Ft. Benning.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

State study grants for Ft. Benning soldiers' spouses

The $2,296,638 Heroes at Home DOL/DOD Military Spouse initiative fund offers spouses of active duty military personnel at Fort Benning $6,000 over a two-year period.

The money is to enable them to complete post-secondary education at two-year community and technical colleges statewide.

“I applaud the strength shown by military spouses in times of war and peace,” Governor Sonny Perdue said of the program. “It is my hope that we are able to show our true appreciation for these heroes at home by aiding them in the advancement of their education and their careers,” Perdue said, according to a statement released by the Govenor's Office Wednesday.
Some 2,400 spouses at Ft. Benning are expected to be eligible for these grants.

More information on the program is available here and here.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of Ft. Benning, and military affairs.

Friday, February 29, 2008

Ft. Benning going whole hog over feral pigs


Maj. Bobby Toon posing in October 2007 with a feral pig he killed at Fort Benning. (AP Photo/Fort Benning)

Maj. Bobby Toon is known as the Pig Czar at the huge army post on Georgia's western edge.

He has been assigned to help rid Fort Benning of its unwanted guests: an estimated 6,000 feral pigs that roam the 184,000-acre installation.

The animals, common throughout Georgia, are known for tearing up woodlands and farms. They are aggressive foragers, gobbling up native vegetation and endangered species.

"These pigs feed and breed," Toon said. "That's all they care about. I've been here off and on for 17 years, and I can never remember a pig population as big as it is now."
Since July, more than 900 pigs have been killed.
"These animals can smell a turkey egg three miles away," Toon said. "They're also a danger to tortoises and woodpeckers."
The former 2nd Battalion, 69th Armor Regiment company commander, who now instructs a course at the Maneuver Captains Career Course, has personally brought down 68 pigs in the past year.

He's not the only pig hunter at work.

About 2,000 people who are authorized to hunt on the post have been encouraged to go after the feral pigs. They must be active-duty, retired military or civilian workers at Benning and must have a license from the base.

The post is offering a $40 bounty for every pig tail that's brought in.
"We did a cost estimate with civilian contractors, but they wanted way too much money for the job," Toon said.
(The Associated Press)

Click here for more GPB News coverage about Ft. Benning.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Army seen backing Ft. Benning armor center eco-study

An environmental study on constructing armor school facilities at Ft. Benning, that would bring a major influx of military personnel to the area has been released to the public.

The study, part of the military's Base Realignment and Closure Commission's recommendations include relocating the Army's armor center, currently based at Ft. Knox, Kentucky.

An estimated 30,000 troops and family, civilian employees and contractors would be relocated to the Columbus area.

Linda Veenstra, environmental counsel for Ft. Benning's Judge Advocate's office says that while the project would cause some negative impact, the army was taking steps to limit the damage.

“We've tried to avoid areas that we know have important resources on them, whether it be federally listed species or wetlands, or historic properties such as archaeological sites.”

Construction could start late this summer, pending army approval, base commander Maj. Gen. Walt Wojdakowski told the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer newspaper.

The Department of the Army, however, has yet to officially approve the Environmental Impact Statement document.

A public discussion on the study is set for May 10 at the Columbus Convention & Trade Center, and copies are available at several local libraries and online.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Ft. Benning: cutting water usage


Water level at Upatoi Creek, Ft. Benning. (Nat'l Weather Service)


Ft. Benning officials say the post, which uses an estimated six million gallons of water daily, is taking steps to slash that use, in light of the statewide, 10-percent cutback ordinance.

The post, which has an on-site water purification plant, is working with Columbus Water Works officials to adjust its usage, according to Garrison Commander, Col. Keith Lovejoy:

"We are in close coordination with Columbus Water Works to mirror exactly what the local community is doing to conserve resources -- no watering of lawns, no washing of cars. We are also looking at other measures to conserve water at our commercial operations."
In related news, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which operates Lake Lanier, expects the lake will be nearly 21 feet below full by December 7th. That will be its lowest point since the lake was built in the 1950s.

Meanwhile, however, Georgia is withdrawing its lawsuit against the Corps over how the group releases water from Georgia reservoirs.

Click here to read more on that and other GPB News drought coverage.

(With The Associated Press)

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Iraqi man, family start new life in Columbus


Maj. Britton Yount, Iraqi interpreter Ammar Mahdi Hadi at Ft. Benning. (Courtesy of The Bayonet/Bridgett Siter)

An Iraqi interpreter who worked hand-in-hand with a Ft. Benning-based US Army major and coalition forces throughout Iraq, is now making a new home in Columbus, together with his wife and eight-month-old daughter.

29-year-old Ammar Mahdi Hadi, in his three years working as an interpreter, says he saw 20 friends and colleagues killed for such duty:

"People were starting to get suspicious. If they recognize I love Americans, we would not be safe," he said. "I want better for my daughter. I wish for her that she does not live in that bloody world."
Major James Yount worked closely with Hadi, who fled Iraq several weeks ago with his family, according to a just-released report in the post newspaper, The Bayonet.

Hadi is now employed as a construction worker at Ft. Benning. He, his wife and baby girl are learning the sights, sounds, and tastes of a new life in America.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Iraq: Ft. Benning soldier dies in firefight


Dillon (Image courtesy Army Special Operations Command)

A Ft. Benning soldier was killed in Iraq when insurgents attacked his unit with small arms fire, the Department of Defense said Tuesday.

Cpl. Benjamin Dillon, 22, died Sunday in northern Iraq, according to a military statement.

Dillon had been assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment. He enlisted in the Army during his senior year at Southeast High School in Ravenna, Ohio, about 30 miles southeast of Cleveland.

Dillon was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart and Meritorious Service Medal. He is survived by his parents Terry and Linda Dillon, and brothers Nicholas and Steven all of Rootstown, Ohio.

Click on the links for more GPB News coverage of events in Iraq and at Ft. Benning.

(With the Associated Press)

Thursday, February 21, 2008

New air service to Columbus








The Eclipse 500 is part of a new airplane category called "very light jets," and carries three passengers at speeds up to 425 mph — faster than the average propeller plane its size. (Wilfredo Lee/AP file)


A regional business air-carrier has just added Columbus to its roster of destinations in Georgia and across the southeast. DayJet bills itself as the world's first per-seat, on-demand jet service.

The carrier currently serves 45 destinations across the southeast, catering to business travelers able to pay premium prices. For example, a hop between just-added destinations, Columbus and Savannah, runs between $300 and $1,000 dollars.

While DayJet is aimed chiefly at Columbus's executive clientèle like AFLAC and Synovus, Georgia Third District Congressman Lynn Westmoreland says the increased flight options will bolster smaller industries, as well:

"With the hassle of airports and major hubs, now, we just think this is going to be the access for a lot of businesses; some of these businesses in outlying areas to have a chance of promoting business and getting people to come to their area, because they'll now have this transportation for people within the business."

Westmoreland, who sits on the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, and the aviation subcommittee says Ft. Benning's planned expansion will also benefit from the increased air traffic.

The training post is expected to see over 30,000 troops and dependents moving to the area over the next three years, as part of the Army's base relocation project:

"With the expansion of Ft. Benning, and all the things that Ft. Benning is doing, and the armor division coming down, and the new infantry museum... we just think that there needs to be just a little bit better regional service to the Columbus area. I think, right now, Delta has maybe two flights a day."

Westmoreland says DayJet may create a market more attractive to carriers like Delta, Airtran or Southwest.

A company spokesman says they'll be announcing other Georgia destinations in coming weeks.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of transportation issues.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Trees for Troops Makes Delivery to Ft. Benning


ROTC students from Jackson High School load Christmas trees donated to the national Trees for Troops program by Georgia growers in 2006. (Georgia Farm Bureau)

The Trees for Troops program, sponsored by the Christmas SPIRIT Foundation and FedEx Corp., stopped at Ft. Benning on Monday, to deliver some 700 Christmas Trees to troops and military families.

The program is a part of a nationwide organization that provides transportation and logistical assistance for community and non-profit organizations, according to a statement by the company.

This year, more than 11,000 trees from 27 states are expected to be delivered to 25 military bases in the United States and overseas. In 2005, the program delivered more than 4,300 trees to bases across the United States.

Click here for more GPB News about Ft. Benning.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Army pledges $1.4 billion to families

The Army is pledging 1.4 billion dollars to support and aid soldiers' families, in a ceremony to be held at Ft. Benning on Wednesday.

Calling it an “Army Family Covenant,” the assistance will be used to bolster free child-care hours for spouses of deployed soldiers, offer free youth sports programs, build new on-post child-care centers, barracks and other facilities.


Senior Ft. Benning officials will take part in the ceremony, along with post garrison commander, Col. Keith Lovejoy. Lovejoy says of the program:
"...we’re putting money toward programs that will truly impact families, because the Army now recognizes, now fully understands that this is an overall readiness issue. The Army understands the impact the family here has on the mission over there.”
Army Chief of Staff Gen. George W. Casey announced the program earlier this month, and said that such ceremonies will be held at other army facilities.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of Ft. Benning.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

SOA Watch revving up for weekend protests


Fr. Bourgeois unpacking posters and protest material at his apartment outside Ft. Benning in preparation for upcoming demonstrations. (Dave Bender)

The SOA Watch group is gearing up for their annual demonstrations outside of Ft. Benning, and they are planning big.

Father Roy Bourgeois, who founded the organization in 1990, says they're expecting 20,000 supporters to flood Columbus this weekend:

“We are gathering here in peace. We are gathering here to speak for countless brothers and sisters in Latin America who have been the victims of this school and the violence - the graduates - who have returned to their home countries, especially in countries like El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and many other countries – Columbia, where most of them are coming from today.”
The movement wants the federal government to close down the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation – once known as the School of the Americas – which is located at the army post.

Fr. Bourgeois holding a list of WHINSEC students, with names blacked-out for security reasons, according to the school. (Dave Bender)

Bourgeois says the school is training military and law-enforcement groups that are culpable of human rights abuses in their home countries.

Click here for more GPB News coverage about Ft. Benning.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Columbus: brass tacks at Ft. Benning BRAC session


Military and civilian officials at BRAC session.
(Dave Bender)

Over 100 Georgia and Alabama officials, and federal and military representatives met in Columbus on Monday to discuss the army's planned Base Realignment and Closure program (BRAC).

The army plans to move an armor school, currently based at Ft. Knox, KY to Ft. Benning within the next three to five years.

The comprehensive morning session met at Columbus State University's Cunningham Center for Leadership. On the agenda were schools, housing, health care, transportation, public services, ecological, economic impact, as well as funding issues related to the move.

Colonel Keith Lovejoy, Fort Benning Garrison Commander of Fort Benning, told GPB News they planned to cover issues of anticipated base growth: “in terms of soldiers coming to the base; what kind of construction we're going to do; effects on the local roads, the networks... the different utilities... basically just making sure the community is aware of what's coming and when it's going to be here – and then also, to answer some of the concerns of the local community.”

The army expects over 30,000 troops, and their families, contractors and service providers to move into the Columbus and Chattahoochee Valley area.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

ATF Doubles Reward on Ft. Benning Blaze Info


Remains of the JAG office. Click on the image for more photos. (Photo: Lily Gordon, Ledger-Enquirer.com)

Federal and military authorities are probing a suspicious blaze that destroyed the Judge Advocate General’s office at
Fort Benning, near Columbus in West Georgia.

Investigators from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are looking for evidence in the charred remains of the 10,000 sq.-ft. building, which went up in flames on Friday.


The ATF announced Tuesday afternoon that they are adding an additional $5,000 to the $5,000 reward offered earlier by the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command (CID) for information on the fire.

Special agent Scott Sweetlow of the BATF National Response Team says the're looking for what sparked the blaze:

“...we're trying to develop a full picture with the use of our accelerant-detection canines, and our chemists. We're collecting evidence, but as a general principle we don't make any sort of a determination until we've got all of the facts in hand.”
If investigators find traces of an accelerant, it may indicate arson.

Former staff judge advocate and former Columbus mayor Bob Poydasheff worked at the office in the 1960's and 70's. He was stunned by the loss:

"It's just absolutely devastating to see. ...an historic building destroyed for what purpose? ... it's just unfair; it's stupid, it's just unfair."

Fort Benning emergency service director Lt. Col. Kevin Clarke says 35 Columbus and Fort Benning firefighters battled the fire, which they got under control around 1 a.m. Saturday.

After viewing the site on Sunday, and speaking with officials, Poydasheff says he has little doubt as to the cause:

"I've been told that there were some propane tanks, and so the way it presented itself - the entire building - there's no doubt in my mind; it was arson."

Sweetow declined to confirm or deny whether propane tanks were found among the ruins of the building.

Sweetow says they expect to conclude their investigation by Friday.

Senior JAG attorney Col. Tracy Barnes believe they'll be able to recover most of their digitally-stored files on the office's network server, computers and e-mail.
"We're certainly aware, that as part of the justice system - the federal court system, there's some critical records that are there," Sweetow said.
Barnes says no evidence was kept in the structure, and that the fire will not affect pending cases.

Post officials have relocated basic legal services to another office for the interim.

The 10,000 sq.-ft. JAG office is the second oldest building on post, and provides legal services for infantry troops and their families at the 184,000-acre training base.

The structure houses a law library, archives, and the courtroom where Army Lt. William Calley was convicted in the murder of 22 Vietnamese citizens at My Lai in 1968. That case was later overturned.

Officials have requested that anyone with information regarding the incident contact CID at 706-545-8915 or e-mail CID at crimetips@conus.army.mil, or ATF's 24-hour, toll-free hotline at 1-888-ATF-FIRE (1-888-283-3473).

Click here for more GPB News coverage about Fort Benning.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Kucinich calls for closing Ft. Benning school


Kucinich addressing the rally. (Dave Bender)

Ohio Democratic Presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich told protesters outside the gates of Fort Benning, today that, if elected, he would close an on-post school that trains Latin American military personnel.

"Today I'm here in solidarity with people from all over the world, who are, who are demanding... that America take a new direction."

Opponents of the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation – once known as the School of the Americas - charge that it trains personnel that have been involved in killings and human rights abuses in their home countries.

SOA founder Fr. Roy Bourgeois (blue shirt), and Kucinich comfort a Guatemalan woman, Adriana Bartow and her daughter, Sarina Carrillo sobbing against the fence. The two women, who now live in Chicago said they were grieving over the loss of seven members of their family to military forces in their country in 1981. (Dave Bender)

The weekend-long event, organized by the School of the Americas Watch, culminated with Sunday's march, a mock funeral procession, and a mass "die-in," along the post perimeter fence.

Columbus Police Chief Ricky Boren said that Ft. Benning military police detained 10 protesters for trying to infiltrate onto the post. They were caught climbing over the perimeter fence at two locations, both of which were near the construction site of the National Infantry Museum on Lumpkin Road, Boren said.

Two protesters demonstrate "waterboarding," a controversial interrogation technique, opponents consider a form of torture. The willing subject of this simulation was unrestrained, and emerged unharmed from the brief exhibition. (Dave Bender)

Local officials said that on Saturday a similar number of residents and soldiers attended a day-long counter-rally downtown, calling it God Bless Fort Benning (GBFB), in a show of support for the infantry training facility.

Columbus Mayor Jim Weatherington who took an active part in the previous day's activities at GBFB, commented on the SOA Watch rally, saying:

"...We don't support it, but it's our job to make sure that folks can demonstrate -- but they can demonstrate peacefully."

Click here for more GPB News coverage of the SOA Watch protest.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Ft. Benning SOA protesters sentenced


SOA Watch founder, Reverend Fr. Roy Bourgeois, talks with members and defendants outside of Columbus District Court after the sentencing. (Photo: Dave Bender)

Demonstrators who illegally trespassed on the Fort Benning Army base during a protest were sentenced today in Columbus District Court.

This past November, eleven men and women protested at the School of the Americas Watch. Thousands of protesters annually demonstrate against the training school, now called the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation.


Baghuan after sentencing. (Photo: Dave Bender)


U.S. Magistrate G. Mallon Faircloth gave 33-year-old Ozone Baghuan of Duluth, Minnesota a three-month sentence, but did fine him:

“This is my second offense and I'm very happy with my sentence.”
Interviewer: When are you going to start serving your sentence?
“I asked for self-report, and hopefully in the spring, once the Bureau of Prisons have made a bed for me.”
Faircloth handed down the group members - whose ages ranged from the 20s to the 70s - sentences including upwards of 90-days prison terms, and fines reaching $500 dollars.

SOA Watch Founder Fr. Roy Bourgeois, who was at the hearings, say the accused were proud of their deeds:
“You know, they embrace this. I mean, they're not trying to look for a loophole, they know the implications when the cross the line onto Fort Benning.”
Bourgeois says the protesters are following their conscience:
“True, they're breaking a law of Ft. Benning; a law of the state – but – like the Dr. Martin Luther King said, they're trying to follow a higher law.”
SOA Watch says the facility, located on the base, trains Latin American security forces in torture techniques – an allegation the school vehemently denies.


Rials during a tour of the facility, Nov., 2007. (File photo: Dave Bender)


Lee Rials, spokesman for WHINSEC said the facility's doors and classes were open to any visitor. Commenting on the sentencing, he said:
“Visitors are welcome to come see what we are and what we do before making such a life-changing decision.”

Military personnel at a training session at WHINSEC. (File photo: Dave Bender)

Click here for more GPB News coverage of WHINSEC, and SOA Watch.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Ft. Benning soldier discharged in trainee beating

The Army has kicked out a soldier for beating a Jewish trainee who complained about religious harassment in their basic training unit, a Fort Benning spokesman said Monday.

Citing federal privacy laws, the Army had previously refused to discuss how it punished the attacker of Pvt. Michael Handman, 20, of Atlanta, other than to say the case had been handled as an administrative matter rather than as a crime.

That changed after the southeast director of the Anti-Defamation League met Fort Benning officials Friday. Col. Charles Durr, chief of staff at Fort Benning, told the ADL's Bill Nigut the assailant had been discharged.

"The soldier that was punished for the assault on Pvt. Handman has been processed for discharge from the Army," Fort Benning spokesman Bob Purtiman confirmed Monday.
The Army says Handman was beaten Sept. 24 by a fellow trainee in a laundry room near his barracks. Handman was treated at an Army hospital for a concussion and bruising to his face. He has since been transferred to another basic training unit at Fort Benning in Columbus.

Four days before the attack, Handman was interviewed by commanders of his basic training unit about complaints he'd made in letters to his parents that he had been harassed by two drill sergeants because he's Jewish.

The Army later acknowledged one drill sergeant had ordered Handman to remove his yarmulke, which he wore with his uniform, as he ate in a dining hall. Another drill sergeant had called him "Juden" - the German word for Jews.

Officials said last month that Handman's attacker had been punished administratively but refused to release further details, citing federal privacy laws.

Click here for previous GPB News coverage of this story.

(AP)

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Ft. Benning unit deploying to Iraq, Kuwait

Nearly 70 soldiers from Fort Benning will deploy to Iraq this week. The deployment comes after four soldiers from the base were killed in fighting in Baghdad over the weekend.

Base Public Affairs Office spokesperson Elsie Jackson told GPB News the maintenance battalion soldiers would provide support and logistics for combat units in Iraq and Kuwait. Family members will see the troops off at the base's Lawson Army Airfield on Wednesday.

The Defense Department announced Tuesday that Iraqi insurgents killed three Ft. Benning troops in a roadside bombing and shooting attack on Saturday. A forth soldier was hit and killed from small-arms fire on Sunday. Both attacks took place in the Baghdad area.

21 troops from the base have been killed in the conflict this year.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Cindy Sheehan, counter-protesters face-off at Ft. Benning

Anti-war protester Cindy Sheehan and a small group of supporters demonstrated against the US military outside of Ft. Benning's main gate midmorning Saturday.

Sheehan, speaking before reporters, termed the army post, “a cancer on our country,” and called for impeaching President George W. Bush.

Police stood between Sheehan's group and a similar-sized group of protesters, who rallied in support of American troops. There were no reports of disturbances, or violence between the two.

Sheehan's entourage was on a bus-tour headed towards Washington, DC, when they made the brief stopover. One protester from her group was seen arguing with a police officer over whether the group required a permit for the demonstration.

Sheehan's son, Casey, was killed in action in Iraq in 2004.


Meanwhile, another small group held a vigil in support of US troops near the government center in downtown Columbus.

World War II veteran Jim Rhodes, who led that protest, told the Ledger-Enquirer newspaper, "I just thought we ought to have a turnout here in Columbus on the other side of this thing, showing our support for these men and women who train and everything here in Columbus, Ga., at Fort Benning, and go to Iraq."


GPB News Team: