-Caveat Lector- www.ctrl.org 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://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/ <A HREF="">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

--- Begin Message ---
-Caveat Lector-

Strange Fruit
=============

By Matt Pacenza
The Village Voice
October 1 - 7, 2003,

http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0340/pacenza.php

MORALES, GUATEMALA--Florinda Lollo Mart�nez lost her
job so your bananas could stay cheap. And now she's so
desperate to provide food for her family that she's
risking her life to grow corn on a former banana
plantation, even though thugs linked to her former
employer, Fresh Del Monte Produce, have been accused of
murdering eight of her fellow farmers in the past two
years.

A single mother of two young children, Mart�nez worked
for 12 years at the Del Monte packing plant here, where
union workers earned up to $10 a day cutting green
bananas into bunches, cleaning them, and packing them
into cardboard boxes, for supermarkets in the eastern
United States. That's good pay by Guatemalan standards,
and along with it Del Monte, through its subsidiary
BANDEGUA, provided subsidized housing in a local
factory town called Tikal Sebol. The banana giant also
let workers like Mart�nez grow corn and other
vegetables on unused land.

But in 1999, Del Monte moved to cut costs in
northeastern Guatemala, firing Mart�nez and 917 other
members of the 4,000-strong Izabal Banana Workers
Union. The unpopular move violated the company's
contract with its laborers, and international outcry
forced Del Monte to give some of the jobs back--but at
lower wages, with fewer benefits, no housing, and no
fields to plant food on for their families. Mart�nez
and hundreds of others refused Del Monte's offer.

On October 11, 2001, with pressure to feed their
families mounting, some of the former banana workers
decided to occupy nearly 1,000 acres of Del Monte land,
known as the Lankin farm.

"I had nowhere else to go, nothing to do," says
Mart�nez when asked why she decided to join the illegal
invasion. "My kids were hungry."

Next month will mark the second anniversary of their
uprising, with Mart�nez and several hundred other
campesinos still on the old Del Monte plantation,
living in what remains of their Tikal Sebol homes and
planting subsistence crops.

For Del Monte and BANDEGUA, the Lankin campesinos are
more than just an irritant; standing by while peasants
occupy valuable farmland sets a bad precedent. So the
multinational corporation, based in Coral Gables,
Florida, has moved swiftly to distance itself from the
conflict--and to get rid of the peasants.

Soon after the occupation began, Del Monte sold the
Lankin land for perhaps a tenth of its market value to
a group of notorious local thugs. Called ganaderos, or
cattle ranchers, these gunmen have often served to
control dissent in the steamy Izabal region. Local
advocates say what happened when Del Monte turned its
back on its former workers was predictable: Since the
occupation began, they claim, the ganaderos have shot
and killed eight Lankin farmers--three in the last six
months.

The campesinos can do little in their own country to
seek justice. They can only hope their global allies
will be able to pressure Del Monte in the United
States. Lawyers with the International Labor Rights
Fund are already trying, helping exiled union leaders
sue the company in a Florida court under the 214-year-
old Alien Tort Claims Act. They're accusing Del Monte
of responsibility for violence in their 1999 effort to
quash the union, known in Spanish as SITRABI.

Meanwhile, activists both from Guatemala and the U.S.
are working in the community, investigating the Lankin
murders.

Ask the banana workers why some 500 people remain here
despite the killings, and the answer is always the
same--if they didn't, they might starve. It's not just a
rhetorical response. The World Food Program estimated
last year that 60,000 Guatemalan children were
suffering from acute malnutrition, with 6,000 close to
death.

"There's no land and no place to work anywhere else,"
says Olga Esperanza Le�n, 42, a former banana worker,
explaining why she leaves her three children and
elderly mother in a nearby village to work Lankin
fields a few days every week.

The reward for braving the ranchers' wrath is
significant. "This land's good for everything," says
Roberto M�ndez Miguel, the vice president of the
campesino association. Just as bananas have flourished
for a century, now corn, yuca, and plantains all thrive
in the floodplains of the R�o Motagua. The campesinos
are currently planting about 700 acres.

The peasants survive here with no electricity or
toilets. Water must be hauled by hand from wells.
Disease-bearing mosquitoes and biting flies are
everywhere; the only relief comes when the campesinos
burn empty corn husks to smoke them out. The Lankin
farmers are noticeably skinny, even for this
impoverished region, where half the locals are poor, a
third are illiterate, and a quarter lack running water.

Plantation families currently live in crude wooden
huts, or in the few rickety wooden houses and metal
trailers that remain in Tikal Sebol. After Del Monte
forced its fired workers to abandon the village in
1999, looters stripped all the wiring, plumbing,
roofing, and windows.

"They robbed everything," says Hugo Leonel Milian
Duarte, the 32-year-old, rope-thin, intense president
of the campesino leadership committee. What's left
today is an eerie ghost town, its houses plundered to
the beams and floors. The peasants dream of rebuilding
Tikal Sebol, but with the future of the land uncertain,
the nongovernmental organizations that help the poor in
most of rural Guatemala won't invest in projects like
creating access to potable water, building brick
houses, or establishing a health post.

Today, nearly all of the campesinos living at Lankin
are men. Most do have families, but their wives and
children have left for safer places. There are some,
however, who have brought their wives and kids to the
occupied land. About 50 children attend school here.
Since the old building was looted, the teacher gives
classes in a barren hut with benches but no walls, let
alone lights or a chalkboard.

Desperation drove the workers to this place. Hope that
they'll be allowed to stay, and continue providing food
for their families, keeps them here. But their fear
remains palpable, rushing to the surface each time a
vehicle approaches on the dirt road through the
property. Right next to their crude homes, and right
against the cornfields, the cattle ranchers rumble by.

Local ranchers first started raising cattle on Del
Monte land in the 1970s, says Annie Bird, the co-
director of Rights Action, which released a report on
the Izabal violence this year. She says the arrangement
here is hardly unique. "There is an industry-wide
practice, not just by Del Monte, of using cattle
ranching as a way of maintaining control over land,"
she says, speaking from her office in Guatemala City.
"Cattle ranching has been not just an economic
activity, but a form of policing."

These ranchers, particularly the Mendoza Mata and Ponce
families, have reputations and influence that go far
beyond their official business. They own nightclubs and
hotels and bus lines. They fund political campaigns. In
sworn testimony after the Lankin killings, a local
policeman described Obdulio Mendoza Mata as "one of the
most powerful people in Izabal."

The alliance between Del Monte and the cattle ranchers
predates the Lankin murders. After the company fired
those 918 employees in 1999, union leaders called for a
work stoppage. In response, on October 13, an armed mob
of 200, led by the ganaderos, stormed the union hall,
took its leaders hostage, beat them, and forced them to
announce on local radio that the walkout was canceled.

During the union hall thuggery, witnesses say, the
ganaderos openly did Del Monte's bidding. In testimony
filed as part of the Florida lawsuit, they say that
earlier in the day, BANDEGUA officials met with Obdulio
and Edvin Mendoza Mata in a Morales restaurant to plan
the attack. Most brazenly, they charge, Del Monte's
local head of security was at the hall while the mob
threatened union officials.

The violence on the plantation has been worse than even
the anti-union brutality. On March 8, 2002, the Lankin
farmers were on their way to spray their cornfields
when a group of about 40 armed men blocked the road
telling them that this was "their land, and that we
should leave because if we don't they will kill us,"
Lankin farmer Jes�s Guisar Guti�rrez later testified.
Among the aggressors, he said, were members of the
Mendoza Mata and Ponce families.

Several policemen soon arrived. "Without saying a word,
the police began shooting at us," reported Lankin
resident Gregorio V�squez V�squez. Lankin farmer Jos�
Benjam�n P�rez Gonz�lez, just 21 years old, was shot in
the back. He fell to his knees. Then, V�squez
testified, "One of the Ponce family came near him, took
his pistol out of his belt, and gave him a tiro de
gracia"--a killing shot--"in the head."

It was the third killing, but the Benjam�n P�rez murder
was the first time Lankin farmers turned to the police;
they had previously assumed local police wouldn't
challenge the power of the ganaderos. They were right,
it turned out. Though forensic evidence led an
independent UN human rights mission to conclude that
the campesinos' testimony "agreed with the results that
the medical report showed," local authorities backed
the ranchers, who blamed the murder on other
campesinos. The farmers learned there's no point in
making a stink, says their president. "It's worthless,"
Duarte says. "With Benjam�n P�rez, there were so many
witnesses. But nothing happened."

None of the other seven murders was so open that
eyewitness testimony is available, but in virtually
every case, say the Lankin farmers, cattle ranchers had
publicly threatened those who were killed, telling them
to leave the farm--or else.

On December 24, 2001, three months before the Benjam�n
P�rez slaying, unknown assailants shot and killed
brothers Oswaldo and Antonio L�pez D�az. On November 1,
2002, Esteban Castillo and Crist�bal Rojas were
murdered. Then on April 5, 2003, Lankin resident Jorge
G�mez was shot and killed.

Edi L�pez Oiliva died of gunshot and machete wounds
after he left his Lankin home to go bathe, on April 21
this year, says Duarte. "We heard shots, but there are
always shots so we didn't pay attention. Then in the
morning we found his body." Most recently, on May 4,
community leader Santiago Soto was shot to death while
walking alone between nearby villages.

Even as the Lankin peasants have been slaughtered, the
ganaderos have benefited from the inexpensive purchase
of land once held by Del Monte and BANDEGUA, according
to a legal study commissioned by the Committee for
Peasant Unity, Guatemala's leading campesino rights
organization.

In February 2000, Del Monte sold plantation land that
includes the Lankin acres to Producers and Exporters,
or Prexa, for $315,000. BANDEGUA and Prexa are
effectively the same company--they share the same
attorneys, the same legal officers, and 100 percent of
the bananas harvested by Prexa are sold to BANDEGUA.

Prexa then turned around and sold 1,850 acres of Lankin
land in August 2002 to its current owner, the Bobos
Cattle Company, for about $150,000, which amounts to
about $82 per acre. Little is known about the Bobos
Cattle Company--under Guatemalan law, the inner
workings of private companies are mysteries--but
witnesses say one of its apparent partners was present
when Benjam�n P�rez was murdered.

Fertile river-bottom land in Guatemala costs much more
than $82 an acre--about 10 times as much, experts say.
So why did Del Monte/Prexa sell its prized holding at
such a discount? Consider the timing: Ten months before
the sale, a hungry and determined bunch of peasants had
taken up residence. The banana companies were eager to
be rid of this nuisance--so, advocates argue, they
turned to the ganaderos. And they didn't have to pay
them; they just gave them cheap land and got out of the
way.

"BANDEGUA is responsible for the violence," says
Duarte. "But they put these other men on us so they
won't get their hands dirty."

Adds Barrera, the government human rights lawyer, "The
company BANDEGUA, so as not to directly confront the
campesinos, has offered good prices, so that the
ganaderos will act for them."

Fresh Del Monte Produce refused to respond to these
allegations. Del Monte legal counsel Bruce Jordan told
the Voice, "We don't comment on items like this."

Practically, there's little the Lankin peasants can do
to fight off their eviction. Democratic institutions in
Guatemala are weak. Judges, human rights lawyers,
journalists, prosecutors, union activists, and
campesino organizers in the Izabal region have all
received death threats in 2003.

This climate leaves the Lankin campesinos with no
obvious solution to the fear and violence that grip
their daily lives. They know what they want--"a piece of
land, to provide food for us, and food and education
for our children," says Duarte--but achieving that seems
nearly impossible. The peasants say they're not going
anywhere, mostly because there's nowhere to go. "We'll
stay with this struggle to the end," says farmer Adelmo
L�pez.

One slim possibility that could help the Lankin farmers
is the Alien Tort Claims Act, a 1789 law that allows
non-U.S. citizens to sue for serious crimes like
genocide, torture, and slavery. Over the past decade,
suits against corporations accused of international
crimes have flowered: Lawyers are going after
ExxonMobil for torture, rape, and murder in Indonesia;
Unocal for torture and murder in Burma; and Coca-Cola
for murder in Colombia.

Most notably, the International Labor Rights Fund, on
behalf of five SITRABI leaders who fled Guatemala for
the United States, has sued Fresh Del Monte Produce in
Florida. The lawsuit alleges that the $2 billion
company conspired to kidnap, torture, and unlawfully
detain the SITRABI leaders during the 1999 union hall
takeover.

None of these efforts will go forward if the Bush
administration has its way. In the Unocal case, which
has proceeded the furthest, Attorney General Ashcroft
filed a friend-of-the-court brief in May with the Ninth
Circuit for the U.S. Court of Appeals, contending that
Alien Tort suits hamper American foreign policy. "[I]t
is the function of the political branches, not the
courts, to respond" to human rights violations. He and
his cohorts have even argued that the cases will impede
the war on terror; in the ExxonMobil suit, they
suggested it could cause the Indonesian government to
stop cooperating with U.S. anti-terrorism efforts.

For now, the Alien Tort suit filed on their behalf in
Florida looks like the Lankin campesinos' best chance.
They'd like to see Del Monte at least grant them land
to live on and grow enough food to feed their families.
But a distant court is unlikely to offer immediate help
to these peasants, who face eviction any day. And
murder every day.

"This community doesn't have a lot of time," says Bird,
of Rights Action. "They're being killed pretty
frequently."

Copyright � 2003 Village Voice Media, Inc., 36 Cooper
Square, New York, NY 10003 The Village Voice and Voice
are registered trademarks. All rights reserved.



__________________________________________________________________
McAfee VirusScan Online from the Netscape Network.
Comprehensive protection for your entire computer. Get your free trial today!
http://channels.netscape.com/ns/computing/mcafee/index.jsp?promo=393397

Get AOL Instant Messenger 5.1 free of charge.  Download Now!
http://aim.aol.com/aimnew/Aim/register.adp?promo=380455


portside (the left side in nautical parlance) is a
news, discussion and debate service of the Committees
of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism. It
aims to provide varied material of interest to people
on the left.

Post            : mail to '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subscribe       : mail to '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Unsubscribe     : mail to '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Faq             : http://www.portside.org
List owner      : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web address     : <http://www.yahoogroups.com/group/portside>
Digest mode     : visit Web site


Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/



www.ctrl.org
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://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[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

--- End Message ---

Reply via email to