-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the June 10, 2004
issue of Workers World newspaper
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COLOMBIAN UNIONS FIGHT BACK: INT'L CARAVAN TO CHALLENGE REPRESSION

By Berta Joubert-Ceci

SINALTRAINAL, the Colombian Coca-Cola workers' union, and others will
host an International Caravan to Save the Lives of Colombian Workers
from June 21-25. Several international delegations have already pledged
support for this crucial event, including one from the United States.

The caravan's purpose is to raise global awareness about the courageous
women and men who put themselves in the line of fire by defending their
jobs, their livelihoods and their unions. In the process, they are also
defending human rights and working to build another Colombia where
social justice, peace and solidarity prevail.

Workers have been threatened, kidnapped, disappeared, imprisoned,
tortured and even assassinated by paramilitary death squads that do the
dirty work for the Colombian government and its chief partners, Wall
Street and Washington. The threats and violence extend to workers'
families. No union leader or activist is immune.

Colombia is the deadliest country for union organizers. Nine out of
every 10 union leaders murdered in the world die in Colombia. A recent
report released by the International Labor Organization stated: "The
workers of Colombia are among the most unprotected of the world as far
as their union rights are concerned."

This deliberate policy of exterminating workers' organization has
decimated the union movement's ranks. Over the last four years the
general membership in trade unions has decreased from 10 percent to less
than 5 percent.

Yet the threats haven't deterred the workers' relentless struggle.

Take the strike begun April 22 by oil workers of the Workers Syndicate
Union (USO) against the attempted privatization of ECOPETROL. This oil
company was nationalized in 1948 through a worker's strike that ended
the control of transnational monopolies.

President �lvaro Uribe V�lez, a strong supporter of U.S. neoliberal
policies, wanted to rewrite contracts to give U.S. oil companies like
Chevron-Texaco and ExxonMobil greater control. He declared the strike
illegal.

Unionists and supporters endured a climate of violent harassment for
over a month. More than 100 USO members were threatened or fired for
their participation in the strike. There were persistent rumors of
assassination planned against all the leaders active in the strike. In
Colombia, those rumors tend to materialize.

The assassination "rumors" were directed against USO's national board
members, SINALTRAINAL, the human rights organization CREDHOS and the
Popular Women's Organization.

A written death threat was sent to the home of union leader C�sar
Mart�nez on May 26--just six hours after an accord was signed ending the
strike.

INDIGENOUS PEOPLE ATTACKED

The violence extends to any person or group that interferes with the
Colombian government's neoliberal policies, whether by organizing or
just residing in a part of the country sought by transnational
corporations for their "megaprojects."

More than 400 Indigenous Way�u people were recently displaced from La
Guajira, an oil- and coal-rich department of northern Colombia, on the
Venezuelan border.

The testimony of Alberto, a Way�u, to the Venezuelan newspaper �ltimas
Noticias on May 23 speaks of the horrendous methods used by the
paramilitaries. "Oh, brother, I feel as if my heart is coming out my
mouth. You cannot imagine how it is to have to escape on the run so that
they won't kill you, and then hear the cries of the kids, of my two
little sons who they burned alive without me being able to do anything.

"They burned them alive inside my pickup. Also, they beheaded my mother
and cut my nephews to pieces. They didn't shoot them, they tortured them
so we would hear their screams, and they cut them up alive with a
chainsaw."

Thirty Way�u people were massacred to terrorize the rest of the
population and render them unable to continue resisting the
government/corporate attempt to steal their land. According to the
Associated Press, the Way�u crossed into Venezuela, settling in a poor
neighborhood of Maracaibo.

That is standard operating procedure for the paramilitaries.

There is concern now in Colombia that a plan for the so-called
demobilization of the paramilitaries will lead to more widespread
violence from the "paras," who could now be recruited by the state as
"peasant soldiers" to spy on the population.

U.S. TARGETS FARC

The Colombian Self-Defense Forces (AUC) is the paramilitaries' umbrella
group. AUC is in bogus "peace negotiations" with President Uribe in an
attempt to hush up denunciations by international human rights
organizations and make it easier for the U.S. government to aid the war
against labor, Indigenous communities and revolutionary guerrilla
movements.

General James T. Hill, the U.S. Army Commander of the Southern Command,
testified before the House Armed Services Committee on March 24 on the
situation in Latin America. He said: "The narcoterrorists in Colombia
remain the largest and most well-known threat in our region."

Hill continued: "All three narcoterrorist groups are named on the
Department of State's list of designated foreign terrorist
organizations: the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC; the
National Liberation Army, or ELN; and the United Self-Defense Forces, or
AUC. The FARC still comprises the largest threat, with an estimated
13,000-15,000 members. Much of the AUC, while still a threat and still
heavily involved in narcotics trafficking, is in peace negotiations with
the Government of Colombia."

"Narcoterrorist" is a slanderous term used to falsely implicate the
Marxist groups FARC and ELN in drug-running.

Hill went on to remind Congress how vital the Andean region is to U.S.
business interests and how the Pentagon has been helping the Colombian
military in conjunction with Plan Colombia.

The most common accusation against union leaders and other progressive
activists, including peasants, Colombians of African descent and the
Indigenous people, is aiding the guerrillas. That accusation has led to
mass arrests in several regions of the country.

It has also caused the criminalization of protests--which are increasing
in frequency and getting more massive, particularly those denouncing
privatization and the Free Trade Area of the Americas. On May 18, during
talks on the FTAA, demonstrations were called in several cities by a
variety of organizations and unions.

Some 60,000 people marched in Bogot� and 20,000 came from different
cities in the south to converge on Cartagena, the northern city where
the talks were held. The peaceful march in Cartagena was attacked by
police with rubber bullets and tear gas.

Colombia's people are under constant assault by the U.S.-backed
Colombian military, paramilitaries and police. They show continued
determination to struggle in the face of the almost unimaginable
repression imposed by "Democratic Security," Uribe's plan to eliminate
dissent.

Their courage must be supported internationally. This is a case where
solidarity can truly make a difference. As long as news of the violence
against union leaders, activists and communities remains confined to
Colombia's borders, they will face extermination. Their voices must be
heard and answered by the international community.

For more information about the International Caravan to Save the Lives
of Colombian Workers, call the International Action Center at (212) 633-
6646, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED], or visit www.iacenter.org.

- END -

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