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As workers launch general strike
Colombias President Uribe intensifies repression
By Bill Vann
19 September 2002
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Colombias armed forces were placed on a maximum
state of alert September 16 as hundreds of thousands of
workers joined in a general strike against the policies of the
newly installed US-backed government of President Alvaro Uribe.
Only minor confrontations broke out between demonstrating workers
and anti-riot police in the capital of Bogota and a few other
cities, but in the countryside there were widespread reports of
repression by the army and right-wing paramilitary squads aimed
at preventing peasants from joining in the nationwide protest.
The workers strike, called by Colombias two main
union federations, was directed against cuts in salaries and benefits,
a lengthening of the workday and a reform of the countrys
pension system, all demanded by the International Monetary Fund
as part of a new austerity plan.
Workers in the oil, telecommunications and airline industry
joined the walkout, as did public employees, who shut down government
offices, schools and non-emergency operations at hospitals. A
walkout by firefighters at the countrys airports paralyzed
much of air transport. The government has responded with threats
of retaliation against government workers.
The peasants mobilization, which has continued after
September 16, has challenged both the governments economic
policies and mounting repression in rural Colombia. Organizations
representing Colombian peasants80 percent of whom live in
povertyare demanding a comprehensive agrarian reform and
a crackdown on the paramilitary squads that terrorize the rural
poor. At present, 53 percent of the countrys land is in
the hands of just 1.8 percent of its landholders.
In many areas, peasant leaders and others who joined the protest
were arrested. Army troops blocked marches in several towns, while
right-wing paramilitary groups also set up roadblocks, warning
demonstrators that their villages would suffer massacres if they
did not turn around and go home.
The outbreak of mass protests barely one month after Uribes
inauguration has underscored the broad popular opposition to the
new right-wing regime. It has also made clear that his governments
planssupported by Washingtonto double the size of
the army and create new means of repression will inevitably be
aimed not only at defeating armed guerrillas, but also at suppressing
this social unrest.
This unrest can only grow given an economic crisis that will
deepen as the government escalates the countrys civil war.
The Uribe government recently revealed that it is running a $3
billion deficit in the 2003 budget, and that the amount needed
to service the countrys foreign debt equals nearly 80 percent
of the governments projected tax revenues.
The crackdown on the peasant marchers exemplified the repressive
character of the Uribe regime. Last week, the government unveiled
a new series of national security measures that give
the military and police virtually unrestrained powers. Warrantless
searches, raids and arrests are once again permitted in Colombia,
paving the way for a new wave of disappearances.
The September 10 presidential decree also creates new consolidation
and rehabilitation zones, similar to the infamous strategic
hamlets established by US forces during the Vietnam War.
The new zones will be under the ultimate authority of military
commanders. Local residents will be forced to register with the
military and will face severe restrictions on their freedom of
travel.
These new measures have been imposed under a state of
public unrest declared by Uribe within days of taking office,
giving himself the right to implement security measures by decree.
His Justice and Interior Minister Fernando Londoño announced
recently that the government plans to resurrect the executives
right to impose a state of siege, a repressive power
that was removed from Colombias 1991 constitution because
of past abuses. It would give the president extraordinary powers
to suspend civil liberties indefinitely.
The government has also launched a drive to recruit thousands
of civilian informers in the cities and 15,000 peasants to collect
intelligence in the countryside and, if called upon by the military,
battle the guerrillas. The proposed civilian informer units are
modeled on a similar program that Uribe introduced when he was
governor of Antioquia province. There, many of these groups constituted
themselves as armed vigilantes, assisting right-wing paramilitary
groups in the assassination of government opponents.
The Bush administration has continued pouring military aid
into Colombia. On September 9, the US State Department officially
certified an improvement in the countrys human
rights record, allowing the release of another $42 million in
weapons, munitions and training. Congressional legislation providing
the aid includes a provision requiring a prior human rights certification.
Human rights organizations denounced the State Departments
findings as a deliberate deception. To say that Colombia
has complied with human rights conditions is nothing short of
a farce, said William Shultz, executive director of Amnesty
International USA.
The legislation specifically requires that the Colombian military
remove suspected members of the armed forces who engage in human
rights violations or collaborate with right-wing paramilitaries,
organized in the United Self Defense Forces of Colombia.
Amnesty was joined by Human Rights Watch and the Washington
Office on Latin America in issuing a briefing paper that names
senior Colombian officers who, rather than being expelled for
war crimes, have been promoted. Chief among them is Gen. Carlos
Ospina Ovalle, tapped by the new president to head Colombias
army despite extensive evidence linking him to massacres, executions
and torture carried out by his troops when he commanded the Fourth
Brigade in 1997 and 1998.
It cited the case of another senior naval officer charged with
planning and ordering the assassinations of 57 trade unionists,
human rights workers and community leaders. While the State Department
had cited the officers removal from his post as evidence
of the Colombian governments commitment to human rights,
charges have since been dropped and he has been appointed military
attaché at the Colombian embassy in Israel, one of the
countrys largest arms suppliers.
The report also charged Colombias new attorney general,
Luis Camilo Osorio, with systematically purging prosecutors and
investigators who had pursued human rights charges against military
officers.
State Department claims that progress has been made in severing
the intimate ties between the Colombian military and the right-wing
paramilitary organizations were likewise refuted by the report.
Throughout Colombia, paramilitaries are able to move troops
and supplies unhindered past military bases, roadblocks, troops,
and check points, it said.
Nowhere is this more true than in the province of Arauca, bordering
Venezuela. The region is the focus of a key US-initiated military
operation aimed at guarding a pipeline used to pump out oil from
fields operated by US-based Occidental Petroleum. The US provided
$98 million last year for the arming and training of a special
battalion, which essentially acts as a security guard for Occidentals
corporate interests. The pipeline has been a target of guerrilla
attacks.
The funding, approved in the wake of September 11, marked a
definitive escalation in the US intervention in Colombia, breaking
with the previous pretext that the US was fighting a drug
war aimed at halting cocaine trafficking and coca production.
The program was pitched by the Bush administration as part of
its global war on terrorism.
Its effect has already been a brutal escalation of terror against
the people living in the area surrounding the pipeline. The Colombian
military has essentially established a division of labor in Arauca,
deploying its own troops to guard the pipeline against attacks,
while unleashing the right-wing paramilitary squads to wage a
dirty war against alleged guerrilla sympathizers in
the areas villages and countryside.
US military trainers are scheduled to arrive in the province
next month to train a brigade of 7,000 troops. Washington is also
to provide the force with helicopters.
With the growing threat of a US war in the Persian Gulf, Washingtons
interest in developing an alternative source of oil in Colombia
is a central motive for military intervention. Colombia currently
produces 600,000 barrels of crude daily and petroleum constitutes
the countrys principal export product.
Just last month, Canadas Petrobank and the US firm Argosy
Energy International signed contracts with Ecopetrol, Colombias
state-owned oil firm, for rights to explore 200 square miles of
the Putumayo basin with its potential reserves of 2.5 billion
barrels. The area, bordering Ecuador and Peru, was the main target
of the US Plan Colombia, the multibillion-dollar military buildup
launched in the name of the war on drugs. It remains
a key zone of conflict between the guerrillas of the FARC (Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia), on the one side, and the army and paramilitary
squads on the other.
See Also:
Colombian government steps
up civil war preparations
[31 August 2001]
Colombias new president
declares state of emergency
[17 August 2002]
Rightist death squads hail
Colombias new president
[29 May 2002]
Colombian vote sets stage
for US military escalation
[25 May 2002]
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