[full article http://www.iht.com/IHT/TODAY/THU/FIN/union.2.html ]

Paris, Thursday, September 14, 2000
Colombia Tops Unions' Peril List

The Associated Press

GENEVA - At least half of the more than 140 union members who disappeared or
were killed last year came from Colombia, making it the world's most
dangerous place for organized labor, a labor group said Wednesday.
In its annual survey of violations of union rights, the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions found that 676 death threats were issued
against Colombian union members last year. At least 69 were killed, down
from 91 the previous year, and 22 were kidnapped.

Bill Jordan, general secretary of the confederation, cited ''ruthless
repression in Latin America, attacks and interference in Asia, arrests and
imprisonment in Africa, severe restrictions and nonpayment of wages in
Eastern Europe and a growing trend to union-busting in industrialized
countries.''

The report said 90 union members were killed in Latin America last year. The
region also accounted for 70 percent of the 3,000 arrested worldwide for
union activity. More than 1,500 union members worldwide were injured or
tortured, and at least 5,800 were harassed because of ''legitimate trade
union activities,'' the report said. It added that 12,000 were fired because
of union activity.

The survey said 37 unionists died during strikes in Asia and the Pacific. It
also found high levels of government interference in Eastern Europe. Across
Europe, seven unionists were killed, four of them in Russia, the agency
said. The group has affiliates in 145 countries representing more than 123
million workers.

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