From: "mart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sat, 17 Mar 2001 19:06:03 -0500




Subject: Colombian Miners' Leaders Murdered


NEWS from the North American Regional Office of the
International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers'
Unions 

Colombian Miners' Leaders Murdered

Unions Demand Government Action to Halt Killings

For Immediate Release

WASHINGTON, D.C., March 15-- The Colombian government must act now to halt
the continuing wave of assassinations directed against trade unionists.

That was the call today from the 20-million-strong International Federation
of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions (ICEM) following a new
upsurge of killings in Colombia.

The ICEM condemned the brutal murder this Monday of two mining union
activists employed at a coal mine in northern Colombia. The mine is owned
by the US-based multinational Drummond Co., Inc.

Valmore Locarno Rodríguez and Víctor Hugo Orcasita, President and Vice
President of the mine workers' local union at Loma mine, were pulled from a
company-chartered bus while on their way to work. They were shot
execution-style by gunmen, some of them dressed in military uniforms. The
other miners on the bus were forced to witness the killings.

In a protest over the murders, the mine's 1,200 workers struck, halting all
production. The miners are members of ICEM affiliate Sintracarbon, the
Colombian national mine workers' union.

"We utterly condemn these vile murders," said ICEM General Secretary Fred
Higgs today, "and we demand that the Colombian government bring the
perpetrators to justice without delay. These killings are just the latest in
a long series of assassinations directed against trade union activists in
Colombia. Last year alone, at least 129 Colombian trade unionists were
murdered. Unless and until the authorities make a real effort to investigate
these crimes, and bring them to an end, the suspicion must remain that the
gunmen are not acting alone."

Higgs also called for a full investigation into the recent death of Dario
Hoyos. 

Hoyos was murdered in unexplained circumstances in his home town of
Fusagasuga earlier this month. No further details have emerged about the
killing. Dario Hoyos used to be the Colombian coordinator for the Miners'
International Federation, a forerunner of the present ICEM. "This was a
tragic end to a life devoted to the defense of the Colombian workers," Higgs
said. 

The murder of the Loma mine leaders has also drawn protests from miners in
the United States, where the Drummond company is headquartered. Last year,
Drummond decided to close most of its US coal mines and relocated production
to its mine in Colombia.

"We strongly condemn these assassinations of our trade union brothers," said
Jerry Jones, Vice President of the ICEM-affiliated United Mine Workers of
America, today.  Jones serves as a Vice President of the ICEM and Chairman
of 
the ICEM's North American Coordinating Committee.

"When Drummond chose to switch many of its operations to Colombia," Jones
pointed out, "it did so knowing that country's hostile political climate and
egregious human rights violations. The UMWA would hope that Monday's
assassinations might make Drummond rethink its decision. The UMWA's prayers
and condolences go out to the families, friends and co-workers of Brothers
Locarno and Orcasita, and we offer our full support and solidarity to the
Colombian mine workers' union."

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