-Caveat Lector-

From
http://www.inthesetimes.com/web2517/bacon2517.html

}}>Begin
THE COLUMBIAN CONNECTION
U.S. Aid Fuels A Dirty War Against Unions
by David Bacon

 In mid-March, Valmore Locarno Rodriguez and Victor Orcasita were  riding from their
jobs at the Loma coal mine in northern Colombia.  Locarno and Orcasita were
president and vice president of the union  at the mine, a local of
Sintramienergetica, one of Colombia's two  coal miners' unions. As the company bus
neared Valledupar, 30 miles  from the mine, it was stopped by 15 gunmen, some in
military uniforms.

They began checking the identification of the workers, and when  they found the two
union leaders, they were pulled off the bus.  Locarno was hit in the head with a
rifle butt. One of the gunmen  then shot him in the face, as his fellow workers on
the bus watched  in horror. Orcasita was taken off into the woods at the side of the
road. There he was tortured. When his body was found later,  his fingernails had
been torn off.
Leading a union often means losing a job, even blacklisting. In many countries, it
can bring imprisonment by governments

The wave of death and violence        is made possible
by U.S. military support.
PIERO POMPONI/LIASON
who view unions as a threat to the social and economic elite. But the most dangerous
country by far is Colombia, where labor activism is often punished with death. By
mid-May, 44 Colombian trade union leaders already had been murdered this year.

       Last year, assassinations cost the lives of 129 others. According

 to Hector Fajardo, general secretary of the United Confederation of Workers (CUT),
the country's largest union federation, 3,800 trade unionists have been assassinated
since 1986. Out of every five trade unionists killed in the world, three are
Colombian.

U.S. energy, trade and military policies are contributing to the devastation of the
country's labor movement. Bush administration  energy policies encourage the use of
coal in U.S. power plants,  and millions of tons are now mined for export by U.S.
corporations  in the midst of Colombia's civil war. Free market economic reforms,

            pushed by the International Monetary Fund, are provoking a wave

      of resistance by Colombian labor, which is being met by violent repression.
And U.S. military aid provided by Plan Colombia supports  activities by right-wing
paramilitary groups, who in turn target  trade union leaders.
The Loma mine is owned by Drummond  Co., a multi-national corporation based in
Birmingham, Alabama.  Drummond opened the mine in 1994, and it is now Colombia's
second largest. At first, according to Ken Zinn of the International Federation of
Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions (ICEM), Drummond promised its
U.S. workers that it wouldn't import  Colombian coal to compete with its U.S.
operations. But since 1994,  Drummond has closed five mines in Alabama, laying off
1,700 members  of the United Mine Workers. Its  one remaining U.S. mine employs
about 500 miners.
Alabama used to export coal--13 million tons in 1996, mostly from  Drummond mines.
Last year's exports totaled only 3 million tons.  But 5 million tons of Colombian
coal crossed the Alabama State Docks  in Mobile last year. It was bound for plants
operated by the Alabama  Power Co., a division of the Southern Co., which also
operates generating  facilities in Florida and Mississippi. The plants were formerly
 fueled by Drummond's U.S. mines. Another half million tons went  to the Alabama
Electrical Cooperative. At the Loma mine, production rose 4 million tons in 2000, to
a total of 11.8 million, after the company built a huge drag line. The company
expects to sell 15 million  tons next year, and 25 million tons by 2006. For
Drummond the transfer  has resulted in substantial savings on labor costs. A union
miner  in Alabama earns $18 an hour, or $3,060 a month, plus benefits.

At the Loma mine, wages range from about $500 to $1,000 a month.  Mineworkers Vice
President Jerry Jones says Drummond transferred  operations to Colombia "knowing
that country's hostile political  climate and egregious human rights violations."
Colombia is the world's fourth-largest coal exporter-- it shipped 30 million tons of
coal in 2000, worth $794 million. Coal is the country's third-largest source of
export earnings. Last year the  government's mines in central Colombia were
privatized as part of  economic reforms mandated by the IMF, and sold to a
consortium of  South African, Swiss and British investors for $384 million. The

          formerly state-owned Cerrejon Norte mine, the largest export mine

      in the world, is now operated as a joint venture between the government

        and Exxon Mobil Corp. Conditions for Colombian miners are some of

    the world's most dangerous. An April 27 blast at the Cana Brava  mine in
Santander province killed 15 miners. In October 1997, another explosion buried 16
coal miners alive in El Diviso mine, near Cucuta.

Drummond clearly sees an interest in supporting a Bush administration  policy that
encourages the increased use of coal in electrical generation.  And it sees U.S.
military intervention in Colombia in its interest  as well. "We are in support of
the Colombian Plan and the U.S. efforts  in the drug war," Mike Tracy, a Drummond
spokesman, told journalist Stephen Jackson, writing in the Latin American Post.
That support translated into a $50,000 donation by Drummond to  the Republican

      National Committee last July;

(Click        to see enlarged map)
$25,000 to the National Republican Congressional Campaign; and $20,000 to the
National Republican Senate Campaign last October. Overall, the coal industry dumped
$3.8 million into the 2000 elections, and gave 88 percent of it to Republicans. In
turn, the Bush campaign pursued a "cars and coal" strategy to win mining states,

         among others, based on an industry-friendly perspective. (And after

     the election, the administration dropped a campaign pledge that it would back
carbon-dioxide emissions reductions from coal-fired power stations. That policy
change has a big impact on the Alabama plants burning Colombian coal.)

On November 3, Bush told a crowd in West Virginia, where he would  beat Al Gore four
days later, that "coal is going to energize America."  He didn't promise, however,
that it would be mined in the United  States.
Colombia's rightist paramilitary army, the United Self-Defense Group (AUC), was
blamed for the murders of Locarno and Orcasita  by the local police commander.
According to Ken Zinn of the ICEM,  the AUC had issued a number of death threats
against the leaders  of the union at the Loma mine, accusing them of being in league
 with the country's main guerrilla group, the Revolutionary  Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC). "In the conflict a lot of assumptions  are made quickly,'' explains
Rafael Albuquerque, who represents  the International Labor Organization in
Colombia. "One of those  assumptions is that many union leaders support the
guerrillas."

The region has been the scene of intense conflict between the FARC  and the AUC. The
guerrillas allegedly levy a 10 percent tax on coal  moving by rail out of the mine,
which Drummond has refused to pay,  and the 215-mile rail line to Puerto Drummond on
the coast was bombed  five times in the last year. In response, company President
Gary  Drummond visited Colombian President Andres Pastrana last year to demand
increased protection.
Locarno and Orcasita themselves had repeatedly pleaded with the  company for
protection. In a meeting just a week before the assassinations,  the union demanded
that Drummond provide security for its workers,  and that the company abide by a
previous agreement allowing them  to sleep overnight at the mine. The company
ignored the agreement  and refused to allow the men to stay. Protesting the deaths
of their leaders, 1,200 miners at Loma briefly stopped working.
The mining union leaders have not been the only targets of the  AUC. On March 22,
just days after the murders in Valledupar, two  leaders of the Colombian electrical
workers union, Andres Granados  and Jaime Sanchez, were gunned down. In mid-March,
Eugenio Sanchez  Diaz, a union activist in the oil town of Barrancabermeja, was
dragged  from his home and shot in the street. On the last day of March,

   Jaime Alberto Duque Castro, leader of the El Cairo Cement Workers Union, was
kidnapped by armed gunmen. Another union leader, Ricardo  Orozco, vice president of
the Colombian Hospital Workers Union,  had his name on a list of 50 union leaders in
Barranquilla, which  was circulated by the paramilitary death squads. He was shot by
 a gunman in April, and his death was followed by two days of national  labor
protest.
Robin Kirk, who monitors human rights abuses in Colombia for Human  Rights Watch,
says that there are strong ties between the paramilitaries  and the Colombian
military. "The Colombian military and intelligence  apparatus has been virulently
anti-Communist since the '50s," she  says, "and they look at trade unionists as
subversives--as a very  real and potential threat. Generally they see groups on the
left  as linked to the ideology that led to the formation of guerrilla groups."
Violence against trade unionists is part of a larger context of violence against
community leaders and human rights activists. According  to the Colombian

    Commission of Jurists, 6,000 Colombians were killed as the result  of social and
political violence in 2000. The CCJ attributes 80  percent of the killings to the
paramilitaries, 15 percent to the  guerrillas and 5 percent directly to the
government. But Roberto  Molino of the CCJ says that "in the case of the
paramilitaries,  you cannot underestimate the collaboration of government forces."


The Colombian government also views union activity as a threat  because it
challenges its basic economic policies. The Pastrana  administration is under
pressure from the IMF and World Bank to  cut the public sector budget, causing mass
terminations, along with  cuts in education, health care and pensions. In January,
finance  minister Juan Manuel Santos announced measures that would close

   many state agencies, laying off 42,000 workers. The money would  be used to pay
the country's debt to foreign banks and lending institutions, making Colombia more
attractive to foreign investors. In March,  the General  Confederation of Democratic
Workers organized a 24-hour strike  of 700,000 workers, including 300,000 teachers
and education employees,  protesting the layoffs. On June 7, tens of thousands of
Colombian  workers took to the streets in marches across the country opposing the
IMF.
The Colombian  Federation of Educators (FECODE) struck on May 15 for 48 hours

        over Santos' proposal to cut the education budget by $340 million.

     FECODE President Gloria Ines Ramirez predicted that the cuts would   deprive
500,000 Colombian children of an education, and 3 million  people have already
signed petitions opposing them. Heath care workers also joined the strike. "We will
not allow the government to make  budget cuts for two of the most important
necessities for our poorest  sector simply to pay interest on the foreign debt,"
Ines declared.

Being a teachers union activist in Colombia is as dangerous as being a coal mine
leader. Since 1986, 418 educators have been murdered.  In just one week in early
May, Dario de Jesus Silva, a 22-year veteran  teacher in Antioquia, and Juan Carlos
Castro Zapata, another school  worker in the same province, were assassinated. Both
were activists  in the teachers' union ADIDA. On May 14, Julio Alberto Otero, a
university lecturer and union activist, was also killed.
The IMF mandate for privatization has been just as bitterly resisted.  The union for
workers at the government corporation EMCALI, which  provides garbage, water and
electricity to Cali city residents,  has fought the company's sell-off. One of the
union's activists,  Carlos Eliecer Prado, was killed in May. "Colombian trade
unionists  have been targeted by dark forces moving inside the state," a union

         statement warned. "They seek to silence through assassination, eviction or
terror those who are against privatization and those who defend  human rights."
The wave of death and violence is made possible by growing U.S.  aid to the
Colombian armed forces. Under Plan Colombia, the United  States has funneled more
than $1 billion into the country, almost  entirely in the form of military
assistance. Colombia is the third-largest  recipient of U.S. military aid in the
world. The money funds a dirty  war against all critics of the Colombian social and
economic order,  including unionists.
This spring, the United Steelworkers sent a formal delegation to Colombia in the
wake of the murders  of Locarno and Orcasita. The delegation met with leaders of the
 CUT. After the delegation made its report, Steelworkers President  Leo Gerard
warned the U.S. government, "We are strongly opposed  to the amount of military aid
being sent to the Colombian army when  trade unionists and innocent people are being
killed by the very  military forces we are financing."
The Steelworkers' criticism follows a position taken by the AFL-CIO last year, which
also called for ending military assistance. Labor's  strong reaction to the
Colombian murders stands in contrast to its  relative silence during the Reagan
administration-sponsored wars  in Central America in the '80s. During that era, Cold
War anti-communism  led AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland to try to suppress
widespread  criticism of U.S. foreign policy in union ranks. Kirkland and other

          labor conservatives accused most Colombian unions of being too left-wing.
In turn, the Colombians, like many Third World labor federations,  accused the AFL-
CIO of supporting only anti-communist unions that  defended U.S. foreign policy.
Today, U.S. unions want relations with all sectors of Colombian  labor, and use a
single standard in calling for the defense of unions  under attack. "Trade union
rights are human rights, and our union  will fight to protect them everywhere,"
Gerard says. "We demand  that the Colombian government protect all trade unionists
in their  country and do everything in its power to bring these assassins

    to justice."

End<{{

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to