Aug 16, 2013
Santos Government flexes muscle ahead of Monday’s protestsposted by Adriaan
Alsema <http://colombiareports.com/>
[image: Santos Government flexes muscle ahead of Monday’s
protests]<http://colombiareports.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/santos_soldiers_f_presidencia1.jpg>
[image: Share Button] <http://www.hupso.com/share/>
<http://www.hupso.com/share/add.php?service=twitter&title=Santos%20Government%20flexes%20muscle%20ahead%20of%20Monday's%20protests&url=http://colombiareports.com/santos-government-flexes-muscle-ahead-of-mondays-protests/><http://www.hupso.com/share/add.php?service=facebook&title=Santos%20Government%20flexes%20muscle%20ahead%20of%20Monday's%20protests&url=http://colombiareports.com/santos-government-flexes-muscle-ahead-of-mondays-protests/><http://www.hupso.com/share/add.php?service=googleplus&title=Santos%20Government%20flexes%20muscle%20ahead%20of%20Monday's%20protests&url=http://colombiareports.com/santos-government-flexes-muscle-ahead-of-mondays-protests/><http://www.hupso.com/share/add.php?service=linkedin&title=Santos%20Government%20flexes%20muscle%20ahead%20of%20Monday's%20protests&url=http://colombiareports.com/santos-government-flexes-muscle-ahead-of-mondays-protests/><http://www.hupso.com/share/add.php?service=stumbleupon&title=Santos%20Government%20flexes%20muscle%20ahead%20of%20Monday's%20protests&url=http://colombiareports.com/santos-government-flexes-muscle-ahead-of-mondays-protests/><http://www.hupso.com/share/add.php?service=reddit&title=Santos%20Government%20flexes%20muscle%20ahead%20of%20Monday's%20protests&url=http://colombiareports.com/santos-government-flexes-muscle-ahead-of-mondays-protests/>

After remaining largely quiet over the past month regarding upcoming
national labor protests, President Juan Manuel
Santos<http://colombiareports.com/profile-juan-manuel-santos/> and
his administration hardened their rhetoric heading into the weekend before
Monday’s strikes are set to break out.

Only three days before university students and social activists plan to
join five of Colombia’s largest labor fronts in a series of demonstrations
scheduled to kick off a coordinated national strike, President Santos added
his voice to a letter sent out by the Interior Minister warning of police
crackdowns on unauthorized protests and an announcement by the National
Police that it will be deploying 16,000 extra police units across the
country to control potential violence and ensure the free flow of roadways.

Speaking to reporters Friday, Santos promised the government will not
negotiate with protesters as long as strikes are still in effect.

“We are not,” he said, “listen closely, so that this is very clear: we are
not going to sit down to negotiate anything in the midst of a strike.”

Peaceful protest, he said, “is a fundamental part of any democracy.” But
“strikes that block roadways and compromise the rights of other citizens
are another thing entirely.”

The strikes, moreover, will not be an effective way of eliciting
concessions from the government, at least according to its chief executive.

“[The protesters] should forget about that,” said Santos.

The President also joined the Minister of Agriculture in reiterating what
has been the government’s consistent narrative throughout the buildup to
the protests: namely, that the labor movement is being highjacked by the
interests of armed groups trying to put social pressure on the government.

“The government is not going to let [the outside groups] interested in
taking advantage of these protests to damage and violate the rights of
other people get what they want,” said Santos, echoing comments made by
Francisco Estupinan earlier in the day urging coffee workers to “not let
themselves be manipulated by minorities with outside interests.”

Meanwhile, the Ministry of the Interior published an open letter on its
website, directed specifically at 28 of the principle organizing groups
behind the August 19th movement, explaining that national and local police
forces have been authorized and instructed by the central government to
take legal action against any unauthorized protests, or any protests that
attempt to close highways or otherwise “violate the rights of other
citizens,”

The letter, which claims that the government will strike “a healthy
balance” between the rights of protesters and the rights of other citizens,
cites a law outlining punishments ranging from heavy fines to 48 months in
prison for protest activities that jeapordize any of several generalized
public rights. The mention, specifically, of “public health” could be
pertinent, as the Minister of Labor has stated previously that hospital
workers planning to strike on Monday could face legal reprisal for
endangering Colombians’ health services. Similarly, the right to “food
security” could possibly be construed to apply to striking farmers or
truckers, should the indefinite strikes lead to food shortages, or spikes
in food prices, in any of Colombia’s major cities.

Carlos Rios, Press Secretary for the Interior Ministry, was unable to
tell Colombia
Reports <http://colombiareports.com/> which of the various nationwide
protests have received the “permission of the competent authority” that
would protect them from police confrentation, or how public security forces
would be construing the broadly worded “public rights” they have been
tasked with defending.

What is clear, however, is that the government is taking an almost
militaristic stance in the immediate runnup to Monday’s protests.

After its leader was dismissed earlier this week in President Santos’ total
reorganizing of his military cabinet, the National Police released a
statement Friday saying that 16,000 additional officers have been placed in
deparment and major urban centers across the country in preperation for
Monday’s demonstrations, and that the government will be deploying the
entirety of its riot police force, as well as 8 surveillance helicopters,
national intelligence teams, various surveillance vehicles and anti-riot
tanks in areas where it expects violent conflict.

The government has called the strikes unjustified and irresponsible, but
protesters across sectors are unanimous in insiting that their attempts at
civil dialogue with government officials have gone unheard or unanswered.

According to discussions between Colombia Reports and strike organizers
over the course of the week, only the miners and a small subsection of the
agricultural sector (the coffee workers) have received any form of contact
from the government. The government, they say, has made no effort to avoid
the strikes, despite being provided with official declarations of terms and
various opportunities to dialogue.

*In the absense of diplomacy, the government is apparently counting on a
show of force to deal with what some Colombian media sources have called
the largest social movement in recent history.*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

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

Reply via email to