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Workers
in Colombia are amongst the poorest in the world yet live in an area
rich in natural resources. Colombia’s complex and on-going war
between the government’s armed forces, drug producers and
traffickers, leftist guerrillas and rightist paramilitaries, with
blurred distinctions between each side, continues. Trade unionists,
students, activists, journalists and those accused of collaborating
with any side in the conflict are potential victims, not just
combatants. This is not only a civil conflict, for following the
globalisation of capital we see the globalisation of the means of
defending capital: war.
In
the late 1980s the Andean Group of governments further liberalized
investment regulations to ease the repatriation of profits from
foreign investments and to allow a greater foreign involvement in the
national economy. This led to the Andean Pact free trade agreement
in 1992. The most recent figures show that free-trade capitalism has
done little to benefit workers in Colombia. World Bank figures show
that the national poverty rate declined from 65 percent in 1988 to
64 percent in 1999. According to the FAO, the number of
undernourished people in the population decreased from 6.1 million in
1990-92 to 5.7 million in 2000-02. If this is the World Bank’s
current motto of ‘A World Free of Poverty’ in action, then
Colombians will be waiting several decades before they even have
enough food to eat in a country with the some of the richest natural
resources on the planet.
In
the late 1980s, when Colombia began to attract British capital,
Margaret Thatcher sanctioned military assistance to Colombia’s
notorious armed forces. This assistance continues to this day. Despite
the efforts of journalists and activists, the British
government refuse to disclose the full amount and nature of all the
military assistance given to Colombia’s armed forces. It is known
that British military officers have trained their members in the UK
as well as in Colombia. The UK government has also aided the
Colombian government to set up the National Intelligence Centre a
co-ordinating body for the Colombian security forces. The UK
government has also sanctioned arms sales to Colombia; indeed
Colombian delegations have attended the Defence Systems and Equipment
International Exhibition (DSEi) in London and Farnborough
International Airshow at the invitation of the Ministry of Defence. The
Foreign and Commonwealth Office issued arms export licences to
the value of ú£3.5 million in 2004. The British government
can
refuse to allow export of arms, for example, on the basis of risk of
use for internal repression, risk of contributing to internal
tensions or conflict in the recipient country or the preservation of
regional stability. Perhaps the case of Colombia is an
administrative oversight.
US
security assistance amounted to $98 million in military financing,
$1.7 million for military training and education and $474 million for
counter-narcotic operations in the 2004 financial year. Corporations
are also thought to make donations to the Colombian military.
The
US Department of State’s Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2004
state that members of the security forces continued to commit serious
abuses, including unlawful and extrajudicial killings and forced
disappearances. Also police, prison guards, and military forces
mistreated detainees in harsh, overcrowded and underfunded prisons.
State security forces were responsible for 124 extrajudicial killings
during the first six months of 2004 and at least 17 of the 65 cases
of forced disappearance. Victims are often portrayed as guerrillas
killed in combat.
One
of the controversial aspects of US-funded counter-narcotic operations
involves the eradication of coca and opium poppy plantations by
aerial herbicide spraying. The US Department of State’s Bureau for
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs reports that 2004
was the fourth consecutive record-breaking year of aerial
eradication: 136,500 hectares of coca and 3,061 hectares of opium
poppy were defoliated. The use of broad-spectrum, non-selective
herbicides means that not only is coca and poppy production affected
but also food crops, pasture and forests, to say nothing of the
possible effects of large amounts of herbicide on livestock and
humans. The illicit crop eradication programmes have simply meant
that new areas are brought into cultivation. The result is that the
increasing destruction of immensely diverse natural forest as farmers
are displaced by removal of their means of living and by poorly
targeted spraying. Some compensation is available as part of the
eradication programme but is inadequate when set against the losses,
and not enough to act as a disincentive to further planting of
illicit crops.
Commentators
have suggested that US-funded counter-narcotic operations are little
more than an attack on the financial supply lines of the guerrillas.
Quoted in the New York Times
last year, a spokesperson from the White
House Office of National Drug Control Policy said ‘Key indicators
of domestic cocaine availability show stable or slightly increased
availability in drug markets throughout the country’. It seems
that the eradication programme has had little effect on the supply of
cocaine within the USA.
The
Caûo Limùn oilfield in the Arauca region, which accounts
for 30 percent of Colombia’s oil production, has seen some of the
greatest violence in recent years. A pipeline which pumps oil to the
Caribbean for export has been a major target for guerrilla forces
seeking payment for not sabotaging the pipeline. The 18th Brigade of
the Colombian military which is funded and trained by the US government
and
an oil company has been accused of abuses against civilians and of
co-operation with paramilitaries. Health workers, trade unionists,
teachers, journalists and activists as well as members of displaced
peasant communities who lived near the pipeline have been victimised
by the both the military and paramilitaries.
The
US State Department and Amnesty International both state that despite
the near impunity with which military personnel carry out atrocities,
they continue to fight a ‘dirty war’ by collusion with
paramilitary groups. The extent to which this occurs is unclear,
reports vary from the merely sharing intelligence to paramilitaries
and the military being trained, transported, armed and fighting
together.
Paramilitaries
were responsible for numerous violations of international
humanitarian law and human rights according to the US Department of
State’s Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2004. There are
approximately 12,000 paramilitary fighters in Colombia, mostly
members of the United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC), a
coalition of paramilitary groups. Though officially the AUC is
demobilising and announced a ceasefire in 2002 more than 1,800
killings and disappearances have occurred since then. Paramilitaries
were responsible for at least 304 of such killings during the first
six months of 2004, including journalists, activists, trade
unionists, indigenous leaders, local politicians and others who
threatened to interfere with their drug trafficking activities or
those suspected of collaboration with guerrillas. There are also
reports that paramilitaries continued to commit ‘social cleansing’
killings of prostitutes, drug users, vagrants, and the mentally ill
in city neighbourhoods they controlled.
One
of the most well publicised aspects of paramilitary killing in
Colombia in recent years involved the Coca-Cola company. SINALTRAINAL,
a Colombian food and drink workers’ union, claim that
members and their families have been abducted, tortured and murdered
by paramilitaries hired by the management of Coca-Cola bottling
plants. With no means of redress in Colombia, the union with the
help of the United Steel Workers of America and the International
Labor Rights Fund attempted to bring a case against Coca-Cola in
Florida under the Alien Tort Statute and Torture Victim Protection
Act. The court found the Colombian government complicit with the
paramilitaries but absolved Coca-Cola of responsibility as the
bottling companies were separately owned, despite Coca-Cola then
being the major shareholder in the company. The union’s case
against the bottlers is unresolved. Since the beginning of the case
SINALTRAINAL have called for an international boycott of Coca-Cola
products.
The
paramilitary groups and guerrillas have their roots in La
Violencia, the war of 1948–1957 between supporters of the
oligarchic landowners and supporters of a liberal state and land
reform. At the end of La Violencia several independent
republics existed within Colombia. The armed forces of the state,
supported by the US military, took these areas by force. From one of
these republics known as Marquetalia, the creator and future leader
of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) emerged with a
small band of guerrilla fighters to continue to fight against the
official parties who had now formed a power-sharing coalition. It
was later that they aligned themselves with the Colombian Communist
Party (PCC). FARC and the PCC severed links in the late 1980s. However,
despite the differences between Marxism and the PCC’s
Leninism, and the obvious discrepancies between FARC’s openly
stated political programme and that of Marx, FARC and the smaller
pro-Cuban National Liberation Army (ELN) are often referred to as
‘Marxists’ in the popular press. In fact, FARC declare
themselves to be Bolivarian and call for ‘Colombia for Colombians,
with equality of opportunities and equitable distribution of wealth
and where among us all we can build peace with social equality and
sovereignty’, rather than for Marx’s call for workers of
all lands to unite for the overthrow of all existing social
conditions.
FARC
and ELN members were responsible for a large percentage of civilian
deaths attributable to the armed conflict according to the US
Department of State’s Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2004.
FARC are thought to be responsible for hundreds of intentional
killings and have injured hundreds of civilians with bombings and
land-mines. FARC also kidnap, torture, and murder off-duty members of
the public security forces. Both FARC and ELN kidnap hundreds of
civilians to help finance their activities. The Colombian
Presidential Programme for Human Rights reports that from January to
November 2004, the FARC killed at least 99 persons in massacres.
Guerrillas targeted local elected officials, candidates for public
office, religious leaders, suspected paramilitary collaborators, and
members of the security forces.
The
war in Colombia reminds us that we are living with a globalised
capitalism. The war is of a global nature and not just a domestic
war. Tragically most workers still look to a beneficial national
government for amelioration of their conditions. However, as long as
the social conditions of capitalism exist, and minority ownership of
the means of production and distribution, competition to be that
minority will all too often turn to war. Be it the benevolent
liberal democratic state with a mixed economy, or the free-market
economy or a government of nationalized industry free of foreign
influence, this has ever been the case. World socialism will destroy
the social conditions that create poverty and war.
PIERS
HOBSON
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