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He’ll be marching in the Puerto Rican Day Parade, but Mayor de Blasio on Wednesday refused to say whether he supports organizers’ decision to honor FALN leader Oscar Lopez Rivera.

The terrorist group was responsible for more than 100 bombings in the 70s and 80s – including two attacks in New York City that killed five people and injured dozens.

“Look, the parade committee made a decision. I don’t know the specifics of their thought process. I wasn’t a part of that,” the mayor said at an unrelated press conference in Red Hook. “I’m not going to get into parsing what they did.”

When pressed to say whether or not he personally supports the decision, the mayor answered, “It can be a yes or no to you, but it’s not to me — because the parade committee has its own approach.”

De Blasio has said he’s marching because the parade represents 700,000 Puerto Ricans – not just Lopez Rivera, whose sentence for seditious conspiracy and other charges was commuted by President Obama earlier this year.

Supporters of Lopez Rivera, who include Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, have said he’s renounced violence in recent years and note that he was never convicted of a violent act.

But dozens of elected officials and sponsors have pulled out of the June 11 parade – including NYPD commissioner James O’Neill and Gov. Cuomo.

Oscar Lopez RiveraEPAOscar Lopez RiveraEPA

Asked whether parade organizers should think about nixing its decision to honor Lopez Rivera — which includes a first-ever “National Freedom Hero” award — the mayor left it up to the committee.

“That’s something they have to decide,” he said.

Parade committee chair Lorraine Cortes-Vazquez was appointed a senior adviser to the mayor earlier this year.

He would not say whether he’s had conversations with her, or whether he has tried to intervene since the decision to honor Lopez Rivera was announced.

At one point, the mayor event blamed the media for focusing on Lopez Rivera when the parade is honoring nearly two dozen other notable Puerto Ricans.

“I don’t think this has been portrayed in its fullness, ’cause again, they honored a whole host of people. They did not make it about this one person only,” Hizzoner said. “The media has made it about this one person only.”

In its most recent statement regarding the controversy, the parade board said they “respect our Parade’s mission and commitment to inclusiveness, and the responsibility of representing the broadest possible blend of voices that make up the Puerto Rican community.”

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