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Tens of thousands expected for Puerto Rican Day parade

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Revelers are expected to pack Fifth Avenue for New York’s annual Puerto Rican Day parade, despite a controversy over honoring a man who spent 35 years in prison for his involvement with a group responsible for bombings in the 1970s and 1980s.
Tens of thousands of revelers were expected to pack Fifth Avenue for New York’s annual Puerto Rican Day parade, despite a controversy over honoring a man who spent 35 years in prison for his involvement with a group responsible for bombings that killed and maimed dozens in the 1970s and 1980s.
Corporate sponsors including AT&T and JetBlue dropped out of Sunday’s parade over the organizers’ decision to honor Oscar Lopez Rivera, 74, a former member of the militant Puerto Rican nationalist group Armed Forces of National Liberation, or FALN.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo and several police and fire department groups also said they wouldn’t attend.
Protesters on both sides of the Lopez Rivera controversy have promised to turn out, joining the crowds of revelers cheering on salsa dancers and waving Puerto Rican flags.
The parade has often been a venue to showcase the complicated history of the U. S. territory, now mired in a recession. This year, it comes on the same day Puerto Ricans vote among three choices: independence, statehood or their current territorial status.
In the decades ago, FALN claimed responsibility for more than 100 bombings in the U. S. and Puerto Rico, including a lunchtime blast in 1975 that killed four people at New York’s historic Fraunces Tavern.
Lopez Rivera was convicted of seditious conspiracy though he was never charged with any specific bombings and has denied participating in attacks that injured anyone. He was released from prison last month after his sentence was commuted by former President Barack Obama.
Lopez Rivera said last week he would not accept the title of “National Freedom Hero” and would instead join the parade as a regular citizen, in part because the focus was too much on him and not enough on the plight of Puerto Rico.
Mayor Bill de Blasio, who for weeks defended his decision to march, said last week he was uncomfortable with the idea of honoring Lopez Rivera all along and was glad the issue was resolved ahead of the parade. Others said they’d march to show support for Puerto Rico despite disagreeing with FALN’s methods.
“I will not let the controversy surrounding one man become bigger than the hearts of millions of Puerto Ricans, ” Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. wrote last week.
New York’s first Puerto Rican parade took place in 1958 when it was barely legal to display the Puerto Rican flag on the island and Puerto Ricans on the mainland faced harsh discrimination. It has grown to a nationally televised spectacle.
Congress will ultimately have to approve the outcome of Sunday’s referendum. Some Puerto Ricans blame the current recession on the U. S. government, partly because of the elimination of tax credits that many say led to the collapse of the island’s manufacturing sector.
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