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From: "bon moun" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



Colombian Government advances negotiations with death squads

Talks between prominent bishops, Government envoys and death squad leaders might
mark the first step toward legalization of Colombia's feared killer networks:
the AUC

26.11.2002 (By Maria Engqvist, ANNCOL Stockholm) On Monday, the Colombian
Interior Justice Minister Fernando Londoño confirmed that contacts between the
national government and the death squad umbrella organisation AUC (Colombian
Self-defense Units) have been made toward an eventual formal negotiation
process.


The ultra-right criminal bands are nominally outlawed but are closely allied to
the Colombian armed forces and are believed to enjoy support from sectors of the
Colombian Congress especially the parliamentarians supporting extremist
President Alvaro Uribe.


The exact outcome of the negotiations are kept secret, but it is rumored that
some kind of legalization of the death squads might be underway. Apparently
certain prominent clergymen have participated in the talks


According to the Prensa Latina news agency, Cardinal Pedro Rubiano, president of
the Colombian Episcopal Conference (CEC), confirmed that some bishops met with
the highest ranking death squad officers to explore a possible agreement.


Monsignor Rubiano did not reveal the date of the meeting but said prelates
attended it from Antioquia and Córdoba departments, where the AUC death squads
have their main camps.



Five facts about the paramilitaries

As recently reported, Colombian government officials are strengthening their
contacts to the death squad umbrella organisation AUC. As a resource for our
readers ANNCOL is pleased to provide a fact sheet prepared by Alfredo Castro
dealing with the paramilitary death squads.

27.11.2002 (By Alfredo Castro, ANNCOL Colombia) Grouped under the AUC umbrella
organisation, paramilitary death squads working with the army commit the vast
majority of human rights abuses in Colombia. They are becoming strengthened by
US military aid that flows to them via the Colombian armed forces. Members of
the Colombian security forces are directly implicated in many paramilitary
atrocities and reports of joint operations between the death squads and the
Colombian army are common and well documented. The links are so close that Human
Rights Watch refers to the paramilitaries as the "6th Division" - the Colombian
army have only five divisions.
Fact 1: The Colombian Commission of Jurists reported that in 2001 paramilitaries
committed 82% of the more than 3,100 killings carried out in 'non-combat'
attacks last year. In recent months, paramilitaries have shifted from
high-profile massacres toward more targeted killings that do not draw as much
international attention.
Fact 2: The AUC is seeking to establish itself politically and has sympathisers
in around one third of the seats in the Colombia Congress. During the
presidential campaign that the extreme right-winger Alvaro Uribe Velez won
earlier this year the paramilitaries threatened large numbers of people telling
them that they must vote for Uribe and other paramilitary candidates.
Fact 3: The paramilitaries are deeply involved in all phases of the drugs trade,
operating cocaine laboratories and engaging directly in trafficking across
Colombia's borders. The paramilitaries also receive funding from wealthy
individuals in Colombia including landowners, industrialists, bankers and media
barons.
Fact 4: The Colombian government has made no serious attempt to sever the links
between the military and the paramilitaries or to impede paramilitary violence.
Even in the most notorious cases of military-paramilitary collusion, the
Colombian government has failed to prosecute military officers involved in
paramilitary activity and those officers remain on active duty today. Notorious
paramilitary bases continue to function without hindrance just minutes away from
military posts.
Fact 5: The US government is not addressing the paramilitary problem and while
insisting that the Colombian government should be given a freer hand to use US
military aid against the rebels they do not propose any plans to ensure that the
US assistance will not further paramilitary violence. By continuing to deliver
massive military aid packages without any human rights progress the US has sent
the message to the Colombian military that breaking ties with paramilitary
groups is not necessary.



Each year is worse for Colombian workers


Being a trade unionist in Colombia has become a high-risk occupation and trade
unionists frequently have to pay with their own lives. Figures from last year
show how critical the situation has become.


29.11.2002 (By Sara Cifuentes Ortiz, Voz) Last year, 77 per cent of Colombian
workers earned less than two minimum salaries while the family shopping basket
cost 2.4 minimum salaries. 153 trade unionists were assassinated, 72 more were
reported disappeared and around 10,000 live under the threat of death.


The year 2001 closed on a very negative note, especially for Colombian workers
who found themselves under attack from many fronts and saw their stability,
security and right to dignified work being snatched away. There was also a
serious intensification in the violation of trade union rights.


The situation for workers and the Colombian trade union movement has had a
common denominator over the last two years and that has been unemployment.
Figures supplied by the CUT (Central Unitaria de Trabajadores - Central Workers
Union) and DANE (Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadistica - National
Statistics Bureau) reveal the highest levels of unemployment in the history of
Colombia, with unemployment increasing from 11.9 per cent in 1996 to 19.7 per
cent in 2000.


For the year 2001 the figure has hovered between 18.7 per cent and 20 per cent
of the economically fully active population. This translates as meaning that a
large number of people are not actually included in the statistics. Figures for
underemployment in 2001 stood at 34 per cent and the number of people working in
the informal sector topped 62 per cent.


As a consequence of increasing unemployment, the level of poverty has also
increased and there has been a deterioration in the distribution of wealth.
Evidence of this is shown in shocking statistics which reveal that the number of
people living in poverty has increased from 20 million in 1996 to almost 23
million in 2001.


According to figures produced by the National Planning Board, 77 per cent of
workers earn less than two minimum salaries and the family shopping basket costs
more than 2.4 minimum salaries. This means that thousands of Colombians are not
receiving adequate nutrition, many have had to take their children out of
education and hundreds more families have no access to health care.


Trade Unions Under Attack


80 per cent of the workers dismissed in 2001 belonged to a trade union
The percentage of workers affiliating to trade unions, according to the CUT, has
declined from 8 per cent in 1998 to around 5.5 per cent in 2001. This situation
is attributed to the fact that people's right of association is violated, there
are massive dismissals of trade union affiliated workers, 'voluntary' redundancy
agreements, company liquidations, extermination campaigns against trade unions,
assassinations, persecution, death threats and attacks on trade union leaders,
etc.

Between 1991 and 2001, more than 195 trade union organisations were dissolved
and in the same period of time, more than 356 trade unions went into recess. In
other words, today there are 100,061 trade union members and 541 trade union
organisations fewer than in years prior to 1991.


In 1990 a law was passed which introduced substantial reforms into the labour
market in order, it was said, to generate employment. These reforms included
reducing labour costs and making labour more flexible.

Paradoxically, the law actually increased unemployment, the economic conditions
of workers deteriorated, their job security was undermined with dismissal a
constant threat and they saw the foundations of a maquila system of labour being
laid. Suddenly changes were being made to the working day and the working week,
job security was disappearing, the trade union movement was being weakened and
salaries were being reduced in real terms.

Law 100, passed in 1993, introduced the privatisation of the health service
which brought with it a deterioration in public health as the network of state
hospitals disappeared. Today there are 600 public health establishments that are
financially bankrupt and cannot honour their obligations to the people, and in
particular to the workers.


Solidarity and Human Rights


In 2001 violations of human rights increased with the implementation of policies
which eroded people's fundamental rights.


The mining workers denounced that the new Mining Code was not only damaging to
workers in this sector but also opened the doors to the deadly curse of
paramilitarism, as they were forced into a position of having to fight for their
rights. The same situation happened with the teachers who recently opposed law
012 which reduced government funding to municipalities and as a consequence
reduced the amount of money available for the education and health sectors.
Their opposition to this law increased the number of assassinations of members
of the teachers and health workers' unions.


The government did not take seriously the very grave human rights situation
affecting trade unionists in Colombia and did not make any real commitment to
fight against paramilitaries who are responsible for the vast majority of the
assassinations of trade union leaders. Indeed the participation of the state in
certain of these crimes has been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt, not least in
the case of the attempt on the life of Fenaltralse union leader, Wilson Borja,
to mention but one incidence.


As for trade union activity, the year 2001 was exemplary, in that tremendous
efforts were made to create unity and strengthen the struggle. The case of
Funtrammetal and Fedepetrol is a good example. These federations united under
the new name of Funtraenergetico and the new organisation includes oil workers,
miners, metallurgists, electricians, metal workers and car construction workers.
Over the year and while this unification process was underway, 11 of their
members were assassinated.

Likewise, the end of 2001 saw the unification of ATT and Sittelecom which became
the Sindicato Unico de Trabajadores de las Communicaciones and brought renewed
strength to the struggle to defend the the country's telecommunications
industries.


The year saw a number of strikes and stoppages, such as the 71 day strike at
Bavaria, the Red Cross strike and the 10-day strike by the workers at Drummond.
The oil workers' union (USO), and the teachers' union (FECODE) also organised
various strikes and stoppages over the year. There was also the badly hit
National Agrarian Strike.


In spite of all the human rights violations of all kinds perpetrated against
workers and their trade union organisations through the year, which resulted in
153 trade union leaders assassinated, 72 disappeared, 27 who very nearly died
after being attacked with firearms and 10,000 who were threatened, workers and
their union have remained steadfast in the defence of their rights and have not
lost heart even knowing that they are risking their lives.

Being a trade unionist has become a high-risk occupation and trade unionists
frequently have to pay with their own lives.
(Translated by the Colombia Peace Association)





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