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DATE=9/10/1999 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=PUERTO RICAN PRISONERS RELEASE(L-ONLY) NUMBER=2-253716 BYLINE=ALISHA RYU DATELINE=LOS ANGELES CONTENT= VOICE AT: Intro: Eleven jailed Puerto Rican militants granted clemency by President Clinton were released on Friday from separate federal prisons all over the country. Most are headed back to Puerto Rico where they are expected to be warmly welcomed. V-O-A's Alisha Ryu has details from California where four of the prisoners were set free. Text: // Sound of people cheering -- Establish and Fade // Carmen Valentin smiled broadly as she stepped out of the federal penitentiary in Dublin, California (near San Francisco) and into the arms of a small group of supporters. Ms. Valentin, who was serving a 90-year sentence, announced that she and her family were returning to Puerto Rico immediately. // First Valentin Act // We are very anxious to go to our country and resume our lives and be with our dear families as soon as possible. // End Act // Ms.Valentin was the last of the four prisoners to be released from the Dublin facility and the only one willing to speak at length to reporters. The others, Alicia Rodriguez, her sister Ida Rodriguez and Dylcia Pagan, quickly drove away in waiting cars. The women were part of a group of 16 eligible Puerto Rican nationalists who were granted a presidential pardon. Seven others were freed earlier in the day from federal prisons in Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Indiana. They had all been serving sentences up to 90 years for their participation in a radical, pro-independence group, known by its Spanish acronym F-A-L-N. The group was held responsible for some 130 bombings in the late 1970s and early '80s that killed six people and wounded dozens in New York and Chicago. By accepting clemency, the prisoners have agreed to renounce the use of violence and not to associate with other F-A-L-N members. But when Carmen Valentin was asked on Friday if she would continue to press for Puerto Rican independence from the United States, she unhesitatingly answered, "yes". // Second Valentin Act // Every person in the world knows Puerto Rico continues to be a colony of the United States. That colonial status has to change and we will work until our last living day to make sure the colonial status of Puerto Rico changes. That is without a doubt. // End Act // Although Ms Valentin and the other released prisoners were never convicted of being directly responsible for death or injuries, critics of the clemency offer say that kind of defiant talk is proof that the nationalists are not ready to reject future use of violence. Since the offer was made on August 11th, members of U- S Congress and law enforcement officials have criticized President Clinton for sending a signal of leniency toward terrorism. They also charge Mr.Clinton of trying to help his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, gain favor with New York's Puerto Rican voters in her bid for a Senate seat there. On Thursday, the President denied politics played a role in his decision, saying he was influenced by petitions from hundreds of people, including former President Jimmy Carter and South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu. The Caribbean island of Puerto Rico has been a U-S protectorate since 1898, but few on the island say they want to break away. In December of last year, only three percent of the population voted for independence. (Signed) NEB/PT 10-Sep-1999 20:41 PM LOC (11-Sep-1999 0041 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .