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From: Bob Olsen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sat, 28 Apr 2001 00:15:44 -0400
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Profiteering From Repression



Date: Fri, 27 Apr 2001 16:35:57 -0400
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: Asad Ismi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


REPORT LINKS CANADIAN BUSINESS TO PARAMILITARY VIOLENCE IN COLOMBIA

A new report uncovers links between Canadian investment in Colombia
and the violence that has cost 35,000 lives since 1990, forced two
million to flee their homes and led to the disappearance of about 3,000.
The report titled "Profiting from Repression: Canadian Investment in and
Trade with Colombia" is written by Asad Ismi and published by Americas
Update magazine. 

This timely report provides disturbing evidence of the apparent complicity
of Canadian business in systematic human rights violations by the Colombian
Government and the right wing paramilitary, said Professor David L. Raby,
Chair, Canadian Initiatives for Peace with Justice in Colombia.

Canadian investment in Colombia is $5 billion and is concentrated in the
same economic sectors where state and paramilitary repression is the
greatest oil and gas, and telecommunications. The report identifies
Enbridge and TransCanada Pipelines as Canadian corporations that directly
fostered state repression by providing military equipment to the Colombian
Army's 14th Brigade, which, according to Amnesty International, has an
atrocious human rights record.

Most Canadians are unaware that some of this countrys largest corporations
are profiting from the Colombian governments brutal repression of dissent
and democracy, Ed Finn, General Editor for the Canadian Centre for Policy
Alternatives noted. Asad Ismis shocking expos� of this corporate
collaboration with Colombias ruthless dictatorship is recommended reading
for everyone concerned about social and economic justice.

As the report documents, the Government of Canada has greatly encouraged
investment and trade links with Colombia, especially in the oil and
telecommunications sectors. Ottawa considers Colombia a very favourable
climate for investment.

Canadian government agencies such as the Export Development Corporation, the
Canadian International Development Agency and the Department of Foreign
Affairs and International Trade have all actively encouraged Canadian
investment in Colombia.

At a time when the US is intensifying its military aid to Colombia under the
pretext of the war on drugs, it is extremely important that Canadians should
understand what is really at stake in Colombia, Raby noted.

Asad Ismis report should be required reading for anyone who wants to look
behind the headlines and unmask the Canadian links to military atrocities,
paramilitary death squads and human rights violations, according to George
Manz, Managing Editor of Briarpatch Magazine.

For more information or to order copies of the report contact Asad Ismi at
(416) 920-8331  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>




PROFITING FROM REPRESSION:
Canadian firms in Colombia protected by military death squads

By Asad Ismi  http://www.policyalternatives.ca/

Since 1990, 35,000 Colombians have been killed in a horrific escalation of
political violence. An average of ten political assassinations are reported
every day. Colombia's state security forces and their paramilitary allies
have been responsible for the vast majority of these killings. Many
paramilitary death squads have been created by the Colombian military. Two
million Colombians have been internally displaced by the violence and about
3,000 have "disappeared." The primary targets of state death squads are
civilians including trade unionists, community leaders, political and social
activists, human rights defenders and poor peasant farmers.

More trade unionists are killed in Colombia than in any other country. Of
the 140 workers' representatives assassinated worldwide in 1999, 76 (54%)
were Colombian. Three thousand Colombian unionists have been murdered since
1987, mainly by paramilitaries. On October 20, 1998, Jorge Luis Ortega
Garcia, Vice-President of Colombia's Central Union of Workers (equivalent to
the Canadian Labour Congress) was assassinated. Union representatives held
the state responsible for the killing. The bloodbath has prompted trade
unions from 26 countries to lodge a formal complaint against the Colombian
government with the International Labour Organization (ILO). The unions have
urged the U.N. body to establish a Commission of Inquiry.

While it slaughters workers and peasants, the Colombian state has extended
open arms to foreign investment and emphasizes "its competitive labour
force." Canadian corporations have responded enthusiastically by investing
$5 billion in Colombia, mostly in the economic sectors where official
repression is the greatest: oil and gas, and telecommunications. This
repression is in response to the labour movement's opposition to neo-liberal
privatization programs.

In the largest Canadian investment in Colombia, Enbridge Inc. operates the
country's most important oil pipeline (called OCENSA). Oil is Colombia's
leading export. TransCanada Pipelines(TCPL)runs Colombia's two largest
natural gas pipelines; the company has announced its intention to sell its
interest in both. Canadian oil companies active in Colombia include Canadian
Occidental, Alberta Energy, Talisman Energy, TecnoPetrol, Quadra Resources,
Petrolex Energy, Vanguard Oil, Millennium Energy and Mera Petroleums. Bell
Canada International is the country's leading cellular phone provider and
Nortel Networks has installed a large proportion of Colombia's phone lines.
Conquistador Mines, Sur American Gold, BMR Gold and Greystar Resources are
involved in gold mining, while Quebecor controls Colombia's fourth largest
printer. Bata owns one of Colombia's five largest shoe factories, Kruger
Inc. controls one of its largest paper mills and McCains runs a potato
processing plant.

Some Canadian corporations in Colombia are not just taking advantage of a
repressive environment. There is evidence to indicate that Enbridge and TCPL
have more direct connections to the repression. Until September 7, 2000,
Enbridge operated the OCENSA pipeline jointly with TCPL. Both companies
owned 17.5% each of the pipeline. On that date, TCPL announced that it had
sold 10.3% of its share of OCENSA to Ecopetrol(the Colombian state oil
company) and 7.2% to Enbridge. The rest of the OCENSA consortium consists of
British Petroleum, Total and The Strategic Transaction Company.

According to Amnesty International, (AI Bulletin October 19/1998), the
OCENSA consortium contracted Defence Systems Colombia (a British security
firm) for security purposes until 1997. Amnesty states: "What is
particularly alarming is that OCENSA/DSC has purchased military equipment
for the Colombian army's 14th Brigade which has an atrocious record of human
rights violations." At the time OCENSA/DSC bought the equipment in 1997
through Silver Shadow, a private Israeli security company, members of the
14th Brigade "were under investigation for complicity in a massacre of 15
unarmed civilians in the town of Segovia in April 1996 and for links with
paramilitary organizations responsible for widespread human rights
violations, including killings, �disappearances' and torture against the
civilian population in the area of the Brigade's jurisdiction." Amnesty
points out that it opposes the transfer of military equipment to units
implicated in serious human rights violations "as it is reasonable to assume
that such equipment could be used to commit further violations."

Amnesty also questions the use of an Israeli security company to procure
military equipment for the 14th Brigade: "The relation with Israeli private
security companies is potentially of concern given that in the past such
companies have provided mercenaries, of Israeli and British and German
nationality, to train paramilitary organizations operating under the control
of the 14th Brigade. These same paramilitary organizations have been
responsible for widespread atrocities against the civilian population."

Amnesty is further concerned that, according to information given to the
U.K.-based newspaper, The Guardian, by a former OCENSA employee, OCENSA/DSC
is carrying out a security strategy that "could indirectly or directly
contribute to serious human rights violations against the civilian
population." According to Amnesty: "What is disturbing is that OCENSA/DSC's
security strategy reportedly relies heavily on paid informants whose purpose
is to covertly gather �intelligence information' on the activities of the
local population in the communities through which the pipeline passes and to
identify possible 'subversives' within those communities. What is even more
disturbing is that this intelligence information is then reportedly passed
by OCENSA to the Colombian military who, together with their paramilitary
allies, have frequently targeted those considered subversive for
extrajudicial execution and `disappearance'...The passing of intelligence
information to the Colombian military may have contributed to subsequent
human rights violations."

As Amnesty puts it, "The role of the Colombian security forces in the
implementation of a counterinsurgency strategy characterized by the
systematic violation of human rights imposes a special moral obligation on
national and international companies to ensure that, however unwittingly,
they should not condone or encourage such actions. This is particularly the
case given that in Colombia human rights violations are frequently committed
to secure or protect powerful economic interests."

>From Amnesty International's account it appears that Enbridge, the leading
Canadian investor in Colombia, and TCPL, (as part of the OCENSA consortium)
have been linked to the Colombian government's war against its own people.
Amnesty's statement is confirmed by the Colombia Support Network (CSN�based
in Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.) in the Spring 1999 issue of its journal,
"Colombia Bulletin". According to this, the former OCENSA employee mentioned
above, described his own role as being "the eyes of the state security
forces." The journal adds that there was a secret agreement between OCENSA
and the Colombian Defense Ministry under which the latter's
counterinsurgency brigades would protect the pipeline. This agreement made
the transfer of military equiment to the 14th Brigade "unavoidable,"
according to John O'Reilly, spokesman for British Petroleum.

Jake Epp, Senior Vice President of TransCanada Pipelines, has said that
OCENSA is no longer using Defence Systems Colombia. He made the remark at a
seminar for Colombian and Canadian government and business representatives
held on June 1, 1999, in Toronto. In January 2000, the Colombian government
awarded Epp the National Order of Merit, one of Colombia's highest official
honours.

Also according to the Colombia Support Network, during 1997, Conquistador
Mines' subsidiary, Corona Goldfields, expressed interest in exploiting a
gold mine in the town of Simiti in the southern part of Bolivar State in
northern Colombia. The south of Bolivar produces 42% of Colombian gold.
Ownership of the mine was claimed by both the Higuera-Palacios family and
35,000 poor miners who had worked the mine for thirty years. Thirty thousand
of the miners are affiliated with ASOGROMISBOL (Agromining Association of
the South of Bolivar). About the same time that Corona indicated its
interest, paramilitaries started appearing in Simiti, stating their
intention to "recover" the area. During March 1997, these death squads
killed 19 people in towns around Simiti. On April 25, paramilitaries entered
the town of Rio Viejo and announced their intention to "cleanse" the area
and "hand it over to multinational corporations because they will provide
jobs and improve the region." {Source: Cecilia Zarate-Laun (CSN), "A Case
Study of Globalization: A Chronology"}. The paramilitaries cut off the head
of miner Juan Camacho and kicked it around like a soccer ball. They then
placed the battered head on top of a long stick facing the mining zone to
indicate the location of their next attack.

On July 20, death squads tortured and killed Luis Orlando Camacho,
Vice-President of ASOGROMISBOL. On June 23, 1998, representatives of the
miners' community told Colonel Reynaldo Rodriguez-Santos, the military
commander of the area, that the presence of the paramilitaries coincided
with that of multinationals in the region. They pointed out that along with
Corona Goldfields, another foreign company, Archangel, was also present in
the area. The miners stressed that this was a problem not only in Bolivar
State but also in other gold producing areas such as Guainia, Vaupes and
Choco. Col. Rodriguez responded that the miners were in league with
guerrillas.

During 1998, massacres committed by death squads drove 10,000 people from
the south of Bolivar, the largest displacement in Colombia that year. The
expelled miners accuse multinational mining companies of funding the
paramilitaries that removed them. The violence continued during 2000 with
the army and navy bombing and strafing villages in Cantagallo municipality.
Military and paramilitary units also carried out a joint operation in San
Pablo and Simiti.

CSN's account was confirmed by Francisco Ramirez Cuellar, President of the
Colombian Mine Workers Union (SINTRAMINERCOL) who visited Canada on a
speaking tour in April-May 2000. According to Ramirez, Corona Goldfields is
attempting to acquire property in the south of Bolivar through Minera San
Lucas, a front company which Corona set up for this purpose. Ramirez
explained that the death squad killings are aimed at displacing small miners
to make way for foreign capital. "Our curse," he said, "is to possess
enormous natural resources and be in a geopolitical location of major
interest to multinational corporations." Ramirez added that along with
Corona, Sur American Gold is also interested in the south of Bolivar. A
third Canadian mining company, BMR Gold, owns a 7,000 hectare gold-silver
mine in the south of Bolivar in an area known as the Serrania of San Lucas.
The company claims that all work on the mine is suspended because "rebels
have taken over the area."

Ramirez pointed out that since June 1998, paramilitaries have killed 259
people in the south of Bolivar, burnt down 689 homes and sacked 7 villages.
The death squads operate with the open collaboration of the armed forces and
police. Ramirez called for a halt to foreign investment in Colombia's mining
sector until the labour rights and human rights of workers are respected.

In November 1999, Conquistador Mines signed an exploration agreement for
Colombia with AngloGold South America. Anglogold is the world's largest gold
producer and is 54% owned by Anglo American Corporation which dominates
mining in South Africa. The mining industry in South Africa was the bedrock
of apartheid. Under the agreement with Conquistador, AngloGold will fund
exploration programs for up to 5 years in an effort to discover and develop
"a major economic orebody."

Asad Ismi is author of "Profiting from Repression: Canadian Investment in
and Trade with Colombia," an Americas Update Report, November 2000. This
article is excerpted from the report which can be ordered by calling
(416)920-8331.  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Taken from The CCPA Monitor, December 2000/Januar 2001.
http://www.policyalternatives.ca


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