US civil rights leader Dolores Huerta accuses Cesar Chavez of sexual assault

March 18 (Reuters) - Civil rights leader Dolores Huerta, who co-founded the United Farm Workers union with Cesar Chavez and fought alongside him for decades to expand labor rights in the U.S., on Wednesday accused Chavez of ​sexually assaulting her in the 1960s.

Huerta said in a statement that she was sharing her ‌story in light of a multi-year New York Times investigation, also published on Wednesday, that detailed a larger pattern of sexual misconduct allegations against Chavez, who died in 1993 at the age of 66, including testimonies by women who said he ​molested and raped them when they were minors.

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“I believed that exposing the truth would hurt the ​farmworker movement I have spent my entire life fighting for,” said Huerta, 96, in ⁠the statement, explaining why she had not publicly spoken of what happened earlier. “Cesar’s actions do not reflect ​the values of our community and our movement.”

The accusations detailed in the Times investigation have prompted the UFW to ​cancel planned celebrations of Chavez and some cities to cancel or rename activities that had been organized in honor of the labor organizer. March 31, his birthday, is a federal commemorative holiday, marked in several states with marches, service projects and ​educational programs.

Prominent U.S. Latino groups swiftly condemned Chavez on Wednesday. The Congressional Hispanic Caucus said in a statement ​it would support “renaming streets, post offices, vessels, and holidays that bear Chávez’s name to instead honor our community and the ‌farmworkers ⁠whose struggle defined the movement.”

Voto Latino, a Latino voter advocacy group, said in a statement that Chavez’s “heinous actions cannot and must not erase the work of the thousands of women, men, and families who built the farmworker movement.”

Chavez gained international prominence with boycotts and fasts for higher wages and better conditions for migrant workers ​who picked grapes and performed ​other agricultural labor.

Huerta said ⁠she had two sexual encounters with Chavez in the 1960s. The first time, she was “manipulated and pressured” into having sex with him and “didn’t feel I could say ​no because he was someone that I admired, my boss and the leader ​of the ⁠movement.”

The second time, Huerta said, she was forced to have sex with him “against my will, and in an environment where I felt trapped.” Both encounters resulted in pregnancies that Huerta chose to keep secret, arranging for the children ⁠to be ​raised by other families.

The Cesar Chavez Foundation, which preserves memorials ​including his California gravesite, said it would work with the UFW to create confidential channels for those who may have been harmed by ​Chavez to share their experiences and seek support.

Reporting by Julia Harte; editing by Donna Bryson and Rosalba O’Brien

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