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From: secr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, August 03, 2001 12:09 PM
Subject: [mobilize-globally] International Solidarity Conference with Colombia



 Subject:
        [WW] International Solidarity Conference
with Colombia
   Date:
        Wed, 1 Aug 2001 23:17:53 -0400
   From:
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]



-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Aug. 9, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY CONFERENCE WITH COLOMBIA

By Rebeca Toledo
San Salvador, El Salvador

Over 400 people from 35 countries, representing
about 50
organizations, made the First International
Gathering in
Solidarity and for Peace in Colombia and Latin
America a
resounding success.

All of Central and South America was represented,
as well as
countries in the Caribbean, Europe and North
America.

The overwhelmingly youthful crowd cheered, waved
flags,
chanted and applauded the many international
speakers who
spoke out against Washington's Plan Colombia, for
peace with
social justice, and in defense of the
revolutionary movement
in that country.

The Faribundo Marti National Liberation (FMLN) of
El
Salvador managed to host the event despite extreme
duress.
The U.S. government, through its embassy in the
country, put
pressure on the University of El Salvador to
cancel the
event. A week before the event, some university
officials
pulled out, leaving FMLN organizers scrambling for
a new
site.

It was a particularly treacherous move on the part
of
university officials, given the long, heroic
history of
struggle at the university. Even so, the FMLN
managed to
arrange to shuttle all participants to the event
despite the
fact that each day's session had to be held at a
different
site.

The opening night's fiery speeches set the tone of
the
gathering. Dr. Fabio Castillo, general coordinator
of the
FMLN, said: "The world has been globalized. But it
is not an
irreversible globalization of neoliberalism. It
will become
a globalization of the left."

As speeches continued, a big screen flashed
pictures of Che
Guevara and Mumia Abu-Jamal, who was one of the
conveners of
the meeting.

Comandante Arturo Campos, member of the
International
Commission of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia-
Peoples Army (FARC-EP), opened his talk by
proclaiming, "We
do not renounce the fight for power and
socialism!"

He continued: "The struggle against imperialism
has
strengthened the left and can be seen in the
Bolivarian
revolution in Venezuela, led by President Hugo
Chavez; the
Indigenous and popular uprisings in Ecuador; the
strikes in
Argentina; the struggle in Puerto Rico to end the
criminal
military practices on Vieques; the resistance of
the people
of the Dominican Republic and the Caribbean.

"It can be seen in the advances of the Sandinistas
in
Nicaragua, the strength of the FMLN, the heroic
resistance
of the people of Cuba against the criminal U.S.
blockade and
the continental resistance to Plan Colombia."

CREATE AN INTERNATIONAL MOVEMENT

Speaking of the talks with the Colombian
government of
Andres Pastrana, he said: "We have proposed a
government of
national reconciliation-pluralist, patriotic and
democratic,
where more diverse sectors of society can be
represented,
including the armed insurgents, ethnic, Indigenous
and
mestizo people. For this we have constructed a
10-point
platform.

"This first gathering is the place to create a
continental
and international movement whose fundamental
objective will
not only be solidarity, but will also be to build
resistance
to the degradation of the environment,
privatization, the
national debt, and FTAA [Free Trade Area of the
Americas];
and to secure democratic participation and
sovereignty."

Angela Torres Torres from the National Liberation
Army of
Colombia also spoke, to a rousing standing
ovation. Bringing
her organization's solidarity to the gathering,
she said,
"We will continue to fight and we will be on the
frontlines
together."

On the second day participants presented position
papers and
working groups hashed out conference resolutions.
Professor
Heinz Dieterich, president of the Forum for
Emancipation and
Identity of Latin America in Mexico, spoke on Plan
Colombia
and the economies of Latin America.

Dieterich mapped out the U.S. strategy to isolate
conflict
countries in the region such as Venezuela,
Colombia and
Ecuador. He said Washington's reasons for
escalation are
both political and economic. And he said that the
rise of
Bolivarism is a direct threat to imperialist
designs on the
region.

Angel Ibarre, president of UNES, spoke about Plan
Colombia's
effects on the ecology and the environment. He
said the
environmental struggle is connected to the
struggle for
solidarity and peace.

"Pesticides used to fumigate lands in Colombia are
used at
26 times the advisable strength. The U.S. and the
corporations are not interested in doing away with
drugs.
Last year alone, over $47 billion was made on the
drug
trade."

He went on to say that the natural treasures of
the Andean
region are another great reason for imperialist
aggression.

U.S. NEVER RENOUNCED MILITARY INTERVENTION

R. James Sacouman, a professor at Acadia
University
Walfville, in Nova Scotia, Canada, spoke of the
social
impact of Plan Colombia. Sara Cifuentes spoke on
human
rights, migration and solidarity. She discussed
the U.S.
mercenaries being used to wage war in Colombia:
"Dyncorp,
which is contracted by the U.S. military, has
special
privileges in Colombia. Any plane brought into the
country
or taken out of the country by them, can not be
inspected by
the Colombian government."

Shafik Handal, deputy of the Legislative Faction
of the
FMLN, addressed the gathering on the effects of
Plan
Colombia on the democratic processes in America.
He said:
"After the Cold War, the U.S. sought to spread
'democratization' in Latin America. But it never
renounced
military intervention and it never supported self-

determination, without which there can be no
democracy."

Coronal Lucio Gutierrez, who was one of the
military leaders
of the popular revolt in Ecuador in 2000, spoke of
Plan
Colombia's military repercussions in the region.
He said the
fight against narco-trafficking is a U.S. strategy
to build
up the military and police of the region.

"Plan Colombia is a plan of war that will bring
destruction,
death, oppression, suffering and more poverty to
the
countries of the region," he said.

Other topics included Plan Colombia's political
effects on
the region, and the media and Plan Colombia. The
day was
also sprinkled with solidarity messages from
several
international delegations.

Lourdes Cervantes, a Cuban representative from the

Organization in Solidarity with the Peoples of
Africa, Asia
and Latin America, spoke. A union leader and a
student
leader from Colombia both addressed the gathering.

Other solidarity messages came from the Committee
in
Solidarity with El Salvador and the Greek
Communist Party.
CISPES had been a major organizer of the event in
both the
United States and El Salvador.

The rest of the day was spent in work sessions on
the
plenary topics discussed. The discussions were
lively. All
resulted in resolutions that were read the next
day and
incorporated into the final resolution.

On the closing day, representatives of many more
delegations
addressed the meeting.

Tarek Saab, president of the Permanent Commission
on Foreign
Policy of the Venezuelan National Assembly,
reaffirmed his
country's determination to weather an onslaught of

imperialist attacks.

Mnica Baltodano of the Sandinista National
Liberation Front
in Nicaragua drew resounding applause when she
said that her
party will always be at the side of the
revolutionary
struggle in Colombia and all over Latin America.
Also
speaking was a representative of the Colombia in
Exile group
of Germany and Narciso Isa Conde of the
Revolutionary Forces
in the Dominican Republic.

An International Action Center delegate also
addressed the
gathering. Participants were excited by the IAC's
proposal
to surround the White House on Sept. 29. The date
was
declared an international day of protests against
U.S.
military intervention in Colombia and Latin
America.

The All-African Peoples Revolutionary Party of the
United
States, several communist parties, including
Spain's,
Portugal's and Canada's, the Colombia Action
Network from
the United States, and the Mexican Workers Party
also
brought messages of solidarity.

RESOLUTION OF THE GATHERING

The resolution adopted by the gathering read in
part: "Plan
Colombia is a plan of intervention and war by the
U.S.
against the people of Latin America and the
Caribbean that
seeks to smash the diverse and growing expressions
of
struggle, rebellion and popular victories. It
seeks to
impede the consolidation of participatory
democracies that
are contrary to the plans of imperialist hegemony
and its
attempt to impose the Free Trade Area of the
Americas.

"The fumigations and the official violence by the
interventionist forces, the local military and the

paramilitaries, which are the same, aggravate the
problem.
For that reason we condemn Plan Colombia and the
Andean
Initiative. And we demand that they be annulled in
favor of
the dialog at the table of conversations, seeking
a
political end to the social and armed conflict
that exists
in Colombia.

"The fight against narco-trafficking should focus
on
lowering the demand in consuming countries; the
punishment
and expropriation of the international mafias that
move
freely with their capital throughout the world of
finance
and investment; substitution of illicit crops for
the poor
peasants and workers who dedicate themselves to
this
activity as a form of subsistence and the manual,
voluntary
and concerted eradication of the illicit crops."

It listed a host of peoples that it solidified
itself with,
such as the people of Puerto Rico, the Zapatistas
in Mexico,
revolutionary Cuba, Bolivarian Venezuela and the
women's
struggle, among many. It also demanded freedom for
Mumia Abu-
Jamal and the five Cuban political prisoners being
held in
the United States.

The resolution stated: "The causes that have
determined
great revolutionary change in the world
historically have
not disappeared. On the contrary, they have
sharpened the
resistance and the struggle of the people at the
beginning
of the 21st century for an alternative world that
will
guarantee development, justice, human dignity,
participatory
democracy and peace."

It was a fitting ending to a weekend of
revolutionary
optimism.

[The writer was part of an International Action
Center
delegation at the gathering in San Salvador.]


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