26 Mar, 07 > 1 Apr, 07
28 Aug, 06 > 3 Sep, 06
21 Aug, 06 > 27 Aug, 06
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7 Aug, 06 > 13 Aug, 06
31 Jul, 06 > 6 Aug, 06
5 Jun, 06 > 11 Jun, 06
29 May, 06 > 4 Jun, 06
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15 May, 06 > 21 May, 06
8 May, 06 > 14 May, 06
1 May, 06 > 7 May, 06
24 Apr, 06 > 30 Apr, 06
17 Apr, 06 > 23 Apr, 06
10 Apr, 06 > 16 Apr, 06
3 Apr, 06 > 9 Apr, 06
27 Mar, 06 > 2 Apr, 06
20 Mar, 06 > 26 Mar, 06
6 Mar, 06 > 12 Mar, 06
16 Jan, 06 > 22 Jan, 06
9 Jan, 06 > 15 Jan, 06
2 Jan, 06 > 8 Jan, 06
12 Dec, 05 > 18 Dec, 05
5 Dec, 05 > 11 Dec, 05
28 Nov, 05 > 4 Dec, 05
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31 Oct, 05 > 6 Nov, 05
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North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee
13 April 2006
Jose Julio: Update from Maine

Reply-To: Avi Chomsky
To: North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee <colombia@listserv.salemstate.edu>
Date: Apr 12, 2006 11:10 PM

I'll give you all a full rundown on the Salem events when I have a moment to catch my breath. In the meantime, there are three more public events you might be interested in:

Friday, April 14, 7:00, at The Bookstore in Gloucester
Tuesday, April 18, The Fletcher School, Cabot 206, Tufts University
Tuesday, April 18, 7:00, at Brown University, Joukowsky Forum, Watson Institute, 111 Thayer St.


And, this update from David Carey at University of Southern Maine, where Jose Julio gave two talks today:


The talks with Jose Julio went exceeding well and we had a great time hanging out. He
got to hold Ava for a while this morning and she was cooing quite a bit at him. I think
Patrick sold out of most of the goods he had, so it is good they are headed back to
reload. Patrick also performed heroically driving off road for a bit to get us around an
accident and to the class just about on time. I will let him share the details. At any rate,
thanks for setting that up with me. USM students and faculty and a few Portland
community members are the better for it and through his inspirational talk, Jose Julio
now has quite a few more advocates for the Tabaco and other communities's causes
here.

Powered by Qumana


Posted by nscolombia at 12:06 PM EDT
12 April 2006
Colombian coal fight comes to Salem


By Tom Dalton
Staff writer
The Salem News, Wednesady April 12, 2006

SALEM — A Colombian farmer whose home was bulldozed five years ago has come to Salem to fight for a new home for his family and fellow villagers displaced by a mine that supplies coal to Salem Harbor Station.
Jose Julio Perez, president of the community council of Tabaco, the uprooted village near the Cerrejon Zona Norte mine in northern Colombia, will address the Salem City Council tonight.

Yesterday, he sat down for almost an hour with Mayor Kim Driscoll, who signed a resolution supporting the villagers' fight back when she was a city councilor. Tomorrow, he meets with state Rep. John Keenan, D-Salem, and, in a private session, with officials from the power plant.

This is the fourth visit to Salem over the past few years by union activists and community leaders from Colombia hoping to form bonds with communities in the United States and Canada that use coal from the plant. They hope to draw attention to their plight and put pressure on the Colombian government and the multinational corporation that owns the mine. In particular, they point to a 2002 decision by the Supreme Court of Colombia supporting their right to be relocated, which they say the local government has ignored.

"We lived in a very peaceful atmosphere of brotherhood," said Perez, speaking through a translator, Salem State College history professor Avi Chomsky. "Since the mines arrived, violence has also arrived in our community."

Perez, 52, does not want Salem Harbor Station to stop buying coal from Colombia. He does not even want Cerrejon Norte, the world's largest open pit coal mine, to shut down. He wants the power plant and others to bring pressure on the mine to respect human rights, protect the environment and public health, treat its workers humanely and help the displaced villagers find a new home and preserve their culture and community.

Dominion, the power plant owner, declined to comment until after tomorrow's meeting.

"We're looking forward to meeting with Mr. Perez and hearing what he has to say," said Karl Neddenien, a company spokesman in Virginia. "Until then, it is not possible to anticipate what might result from the meeting."

Salem Harbor Station has received only one coal shipment from this mine in the past three years, according to Neddenien. It averages about two coal ships a month, he said. He was not able to provide information on the amount of coal in total the Salem plant and Dominion get from Colombia.

Dominion buys a lot of coal from the South American country, which is the major foreign supplier of coal to the United States, according to Chomsky.

In his first trip outside Colombia, Perez has made several stops in the U.S. and also visited Canada. In Salem, he spoke Sunday night at The First Church and also made an appearance at an Earth Day event at Salem State.

In addition to raising awareness, he also hopes to raise funds to hire a scientist to do a study on the health and environmental impacts of the mine and to set up a regional center to monitor the mine's activity and aid the displaced villagers.

Chomsky, coordinator of Salem State's Latin American Studies program, is organizing a delegation that will go to Colombia in August to "follow the trail of coal that supplies power to New England ..." The Witness for Peace New England group will meet with union members and human rights activists battling the mine.

All of these efforts, Chomsky hopes, will make a difference.

"It seems in some ways that the court of public opinion is more important than the legal system in Colombia," she said. "If the company knows there is international attention on what is going on ... that's their vulnerability."

SALEM — A Colombian farmer whose home was bulldozed five years ago has come to Salem to fight for a new home for his family and fellow villagers displaced by a mine that supplies coal to Salem Harbor Station.

Jose Julio Perez, president of the community council of Tabaco, the uprooted village near the Cerrejon Zona Norte mine in northern Colombia, will address the Salem City Council tonight.

Yesterday, he sat down for almost an hour with Mayor Kim Driscoll, who signed a resolution supporting the villagers' fight back when she was a city councilor. Tomorrow, he meets with state Rep. John Keenan, D-Salem, and, in a private session, with officials from the power plant.

This is the fourth visit to Salem over the past few years by union activists and community leaders from Colombia hoping to form bonds with communities in the United States and Canada that use coal from the plant. They hope to draw attention to their plight and put pressure on the Colombian government and the multinational corporation that owns the mine. In particular, they point to a 2002 decision by the Supreme Court of Colombia supporting their right to be relocated, which they say the local government has ignored.

"We lived in a very peaceful atmosphere of brotherhood," said Perez, speaking through a translator, Salem State College history professor Avi Chomsky. "Since the mines arrived, violence has also arrived in our community."

Perez, 52, does not want Salem Harbor Station to stop buying coal from Colombia. He does not even want Cerrejon Norte, the world's largest open pit coal mine, to shut down. He wants the power plant and others to bring pressure on the mine to respect human rights, protect the environment and public health, treat its workers humanely and help the displaced villagers find a new home and preserve their culture and community.

Dominion, the power plant owner, declined to comment until after tomorrow's meeting.

"We're looking forward to meeting with Mr. Perez and hearing what he has to say," said Karl Neddenien, a company spokesman in Virginia. "Until then, it is not possible to anticipate what might result from the meeting."

Salem Harbor Station has received only one coal shipment from this mine in the past three years, according to Neddenien. It averages about two coal ships a month, he said. He was not able to provide information on the amount of coal in total the Salem plant and Dominion get from Colombia.

Dominion buys a lot of coal from the South American country, which is the major foreign supplier of coal to the United States, according to Chomsky.

In his first trip outside Colombia, Perez has made several stops in the U.S. and also visited Canada. In Salem, he spoke Sunday night at The First Church and also made an appearance at an Earth Day event at Salem State.

In addition to raising awareness, he also hopes to raise funds to hire a scientist to do a study on the health and environmental impacts of the mine and to set up a regional center to monitor the mine's activity and aid the displaced villagers.

Chomsky, coordinator of Salem State's Latin American Studies program, is organizing a delegation that will go to Colombia in August to "follow the trail of coal that supplies power to New England ..." The Witness for Peace New England group will meet with union members and human rights activists battling the mine.

All of these efforts, Chomsky hopes, will make a difference.

"It seems in some ways that the court of public opinion is more important than the legal system in Colombia," she said. "If the company knows there is international attention on what is going on ... that's their vulnerability."



----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/



Posted by nscolombia at 8:41 PM EDT
8 April 2006
Jose Julio in Washington


Reply-To: Avi Chomsky
To: North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee
Date: Apr 7, 2006 10:24 AM

Another update, from Chloe Schwabe in Washington:

Things have picked up steam in the last day or so. Jose Julio was kind of tired and suffering from neck pains when he arrived, and still gets them when he tries to read. We got him some vitamin B, which he requested and seems to be helping him.

We had a really good meeting with Jeff Vogt yesterday at WOLA (he was previously working on the Tabaco case at ILRF). He thought it could still be possible to sue in the US. He thought a case against Exxon might be weak since they have already sold the company and might say that it is not their responsibility anymore. We could sue the subsidiaries of the other companies, but it would mean mutliple cases since they are all in different states. He thought the best might be to sue the other corporations in their home countries. He thought the OECD was a good way to go, although it is a mild castigation.

He suggested that we talk with ILRF and sent us down there. His aide also helped us make three visits in congress for today and I made one via a friend of mine.

Last night he had a good presentation at All Souls Church. I reached out to some different groups and we had a different crowd than we usually have at CHRC events. Everyone was really touched and we raised some money. THe Colombian Human RIghts Committee is going to take up the issue at its next meeting to see if we will continue working with Tabaco more seriously.

Working backwards, Wednesday he met with Marino Cordoba of AFRODES. Marino invited him to come back in June for a conference of Afro-Colombians. A few days would be spent with them altogether as a group strategizing how they will work with congress (in particular the Black Caucus) to come up with real solutions to displacement in Colombia. Then they will have meetings with Congress, the World Bank and other institutions as well as a few public panels. I am wating for a proposal from Marino, but I wanted to throw that out there to everyone.

Then we went to Leslie Gill's class and showed the movie to her class. There were lots of questions. She had some law students in that class it seemed. There was one woman really familiar with the terminology he used that supported Lesley and I with the translation. It in the end was a small group, but still worth it. In the end they were able to give a full honorarium to pay for the cost of the ticket back to Boston.
Today, we ae going to try and talk with Oxfam and encourage them to do a prorgam in Colombia under their mines and community program. Then we are going to meet with BIC (Bank information center- they follow and monitor ifi's). Then we are going to meet with Derek from the ILRF. I want to thank them for the ticket, update them on what we are doing and see where we are with the case or maybe if they have other ideas of who we might talk to (such as the CJA mentioned in a different email. They have won some powerful cases related to El Salvador. I do distantly know someone who works there. He is the son of a friend of my family).

Then we have a brown bag at WOLA with many of the NGOs in town working on human rights issues in Colombia. After that, we have 3 or 4 visits in Congress (one woman said we should stop by and she would talk with us if there is time).

If there is time, I might try to go to Global Rights and talk with them about if they think we do have a case in front of the InterAmerican Court on Human RIghts, which Jose Julio says the community has been working on with the Comision de Abogados. Jeff was going to see someone from this group this weekend in New York and was going to put in a word to them to see how this process is going too. I guess they have been talking about this for three years with them.

We also went to look at the cherry blossoms at the tidal basin and to rock creek park with a detour to the zoo- which ultimately we both found depresssing.

Bueno, that is the update for right now.

I will fill you in on how the visits in Congress go. I think we are going to talk about the Free trade agreement and what possibility there would be for the members to write a letter to the government to enforce the supreme court ruling.

----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/

Posted by nscolombia at 2:53 PM EDT
6 April 2006
Los Angeles Responds to Jose Julio

Reply-To: Avi Chomsky
To: North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee
See below for Pat Bonner's very moving report on Jose Julio's visit to Los
Angeles.

We also have an incredibly busy week-and-a-half scheduled for him in New
England, including talks at Brown, Tufts, Roxbury Community College, Univ.
of Southern Maine, and Dartmouth, as well as of course Salem State; meetings
with the Salem City Council, the Mayor, Rep. John Keenan, and the power
plant; and public events at the First Church in Salem and The Bookstore in
Gloucester.

Avi


> Hi Avi and all,
>
> Here's a rundown of how things went in Los Angeles.
> The Friday, March 31, morning meeting with Interfaith Communities United
> for Justice and Peace (ICUJP) was attended by about 50 people. It was not
> their typical meeting, since it consisted entirely of two presentations.
> The other presentation was by Palestinians about some health projects in
> Palestine. Our presentation was second. People responded well. Two of
> the addresses on the petition are in Palestine. I didn't get a chance to
> talk with the Palestinians, but I'm sure they could identify with the
> video of bulldozers knocking down houses.
>
> Some of the people attending wanted to do more than sign the petition and
> asked if I had contact information for the three companies so that they
> could contact them directly. Fortunately, I had expected this and had
> copies available of the three companies. Later Jose Julio suggested I
> add the contact info for President Uribe and the Attorney General to that
> list. So I did, but I didn't have any more requests for the information..
>
> The rest of Friday was visits with friends: Lunch at a Colombian
> restaurant owned by some friends. Dinner at a Mexican Restaurant with
> core members of our two local sponsoring groups.
>
> Saturday afternoon's event at the Southern California Library was not well
> attended, but we made contact there with three African American members of
> the community who I hope we will continue to be in touch with. Saturday
> evening's event at Tia Chucha's Cafe Cultural had about twenty people.
>
> Sunday, April 2, we did not have any events scheduled. In the morning,
> two people took Jose Julio to see Arlington West, a display of crosses on
> the beach next to Santa Monica Pier. The display is a project of Veterans
> for Peace, each cross representing a U.S. soldier killed in Iraq. This
> display is getting a lot of attention in the peace movement.
>
> Sunday afternoon, Jose Julio and I made a visit to the garden of South
> Central Farmers. This claims to be the largest community garden in the
> country. The farmers are Mexican and Central American immigrants.
> Recently the city of Los Angeles sold the property to an investor who
> wants to build a warehouse there. The farmers and supporters are in a
> struggle to preserve the farm. Originally, I was arranging for Jose Julio
> to do a presentation there, at a community event sponsored by the garden.
> But then an eviction notice was posted on the fence and the community
> dropped all other projects to deal with that. They are still there as
> negotiations proceed. So when Jose Julio and I went there late Sunday, we
> just talked to individuals who happened to be there, including a couple of
> the leaders. One of the leaders of the support group is from Nigeria and
> he was delighted to meet an African from Colombia. They indicated that I
> can probably do a follow-up event at some point, showing the video.
>
> Monday morning, the local Pacifica station, KPFK, did a telephone
> interview for their 5:30 a.m. bilingual program. It will air tomorrow
> morning. A short part of it was aired on the KPFK Evening News on Monday.
>
> Monday afternoon, Jose Julio went to Claremont and spoke to Cindy
> Forster's classes. I wasn't there, but was told that it went well.
> Jose Julio had a couple VHS tapes of footage that he wanted to put on DVD.
> My project Sunday was to get that done. But one of the tapes turned out
> to be the wrong one that he gave me by mistake. So I kept the correct
> one, which I will get copied next weekend. (The friend who does this for
> me is only available for this on weekends.)
> Avi, I hope to get the VHS and DVD in the mail to you in time for you to
> give it to Jose Julio before he leaves. What mailing address should I
> send them to? Also, I need to send you the signed petitions.
>
> What I did with the petition was make a lot of copies. Then at events I
> suggested that people take two, one to sign and return to us immediately,
> and one to keep for their own information. I did this because I didn't
> have another good information piece and the petition fairly well
> summarizes the situation. One high-school student asked if she could make
> copies for other people to sign. I said yes and gave her my address to
> return them to.
>
> A few people expressed an interest in the delegation.
> The person Jose Julio stayed with while here is Ulrich Oslender. Ulrich
> is currently teaching Geography at UCLA but is based at the University of
> Glasgow, Scotland. Ulrich spent time in Colombia studying the situation
> of displaced Afro-Colombians. I think it's the subject of his
> dissertation for his PhD. Anyway, he's a friend of Marino Cordoba and Luz
> Marina Becerra. Luz Marina stayed with him when she was here. That's how
> we met him. Ulrich and I were both surprised that Jose Julio was not
> familiar with AFRODES. I guess that's an indication of how isolated
> Guajira is. Ulrich phoned Marino in Washington, DC to tell him about Jose
> Julio's visit. Hopefully they will link up. Chloe, I'm sorry I forgot to
> mention this in our phone conversation.
> Best wishes,
> Pat
>
>
>



----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/



Posted by nscolombia at 10:06 PM EDT
30 March 2006
Jose Julio takes Arkansas by Storm!


Reply-To: Avi Chomsky
To: North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee
Date: Mar 30, 2006 11:07 AM

Reply | Reply to all | Forward | Print | Add sender to Contacts list | Delete this message | Report phishing | Show original | Message text garbled?
Hi All,

Jose Julio gave two talks yesterday, both of which were very successful. The first was to a group of about 100 students, faculty, and others on the University of Arkansas Campus. This was probably one of the larger audiences at the University on any subject to do with Latin America. The second was to a smaller group of local peace activists. He was great. The format of brief introduction/context, followed by video, followed by Jose Julio talking and answering questions seemed to work well for all involved. Both audiences were very moved by the talk.

Jose Julio is holding up well. He got some rest, we hiked a bit in the Arkansas outback, and he got to see the area. We've also called his home in Colombia every day which he really seems to like.

We have a few little things to do here to day and then he is off to the airport and Los Angeles.

Best, Steve

----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/

Posted by nscolombia at 5:02 PM EST
27 March 2006
Articles on Jose Julio's tour in Canada


Avi Chomsky to North
1:09 pm (6 hours ago)

You can read three articles about Jose Julio's Canada activities at the
Atlantic Regional Solidarity Network website:

http://www.arsn.ca/DN3.htm

http://www.arsn.ca/CH3.htm

http://www.arsn.ca/DN2.htm

Remember his three public events on the North Shore in a few weeks:

Sunday April 9, 7:00 at the First Church in Salem, presentation of
"Destroying Communities for Coal" and dicussion
Monday April 10, Salem State College Earth Day celebration (reception starts
at 6, awards and talks at 7:30)
Friday April 14, 7:00 Testimony/reading at The Bookstore in Gloucester

Avi


----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/


Posted by nscolombia at 7:35 PM EST
Update from Canada


FROM Avi Chomsky
Mar 25 (2 days ago)

Jose Julio finishes the Canada portion of his tour today, returning to Boston for one night and taking off for Arkansas-Los Angeles-DC tomorrow. Here's a summary of how things went in Canada from Garry:

It has been an amazing week in New Brunswick and here in Halifax. Jose Julio did a live interview on CBC radio yeserday morning and both Halifax dailies interviewed him and published articles. He met with NSP for two hours and they were cautiously positive about moving ahead with some sort of code of conduct and continuing discussions around these issues. The public event last night at Dalhousie University was fantastic! We had about 70 people turn out and the response was electric. Jose Julio also had a breakfast meeting with MP Alexa McDonaugh, who is the NDP's foeign affairs critic in Ottawa. She has been one of the driving forcing behind a parliamentary bill that will hold Canadian companies responsible under Canadian law for engaging in practices overseas that would be considered illegal in Canada. She is really progressive and a wonderful person. She suggested that an NDP member of the provincial government go on the delegation and will help us try to facilitate it. The NDP is the number two party in Nova Scotia and just might win the next provincial election, which is terrifying for NSP because the company was only privatized about nine years ago and if anyone is going to reverse that process because of public discontent with the company it will be the NDP. We also got lots of interest in the delegation at the public event from members of different unions. I have a feeling you might have a whole bunch of Canadians on your delegation.

Jose Julio will be flying back to Boston this afternoon. It has been a great week and I think he is really happy with the way things have gone. People were really taken with Jose Julio and we had some at the public event last night ask if we can post updates from the rest of his tour (in the US) on ARSN's website so they will know what is happening.



Avi----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/

Posted by nscolombia at 7:32 PM EST
Salem Gazette on Jose Julio


Mine boggling: City, company called to condemn human rights violations
By Dinah Cardin/ dcardin@cnc.com
Friday, March 24, 2006 - Updated: 11:56 AM EST

Jose Julio Perez, accompanied by Avi Chomsky, speaks to Salem State College students about Colombian villagers displaced by coal-mining interests. (Staff photo by John Harvey)


Wiping away tears, caused possibly by the biting wind he?s not used to, but more likely by stirred emotions, Jose Julio Perez stood on Blaney Street Monday morning, staring out at the black pile of coal delivered to Salem Harbor Station. "The misfortune of La Guajira," he said, referring to the region in Columbia where he lives.

With the cooperation of the government, the region is being systematically wiped off the map by the owners of the world?s largest open-pit coal mine.

"It?s very sad," he continued, through an interpreter, "to see what benefits some people, brings harm to many others."

The Cerrej��ona Norte mine was a joint venture between the Exxon Corporation and the Colombian government. When Exxon first came into the region in 1976, those in his village of Tabaco were told they would be able to keep their land, said Perez. Then, 20 years later, "a sea of suffering" came to them.

According to an unnamed spokesperson at the Salem Harbor Station power plant, only about one ship a year delivers coal from the Cerrej��ine.

Karl Neddenien of Dominion Energy, the Virginia-based owners of the Salem plant, says the last time it received a delivery from the Cerrej��ine was sometime in 2005. The plant has been increasing the use of coal from South America in general, however, since last January.

The "Coal Americas" journal of April 2005 reports that Dominion has plans to significantly increase its use of Colombian coal, specifically. South America yields low-sulfur coal and Dominion, said Neddenien, is committed to reducing emissions at its power stations. The Salem plant made the conversion to low-sulfur coal last fall.

Asked if it angers him to see Salem and its residents benefiting from his misfortune, Perez said, "I feel some sadness, but it?s not the fault of the people here. [It is] the economic powers and our government."

Being heard

Perez has the attention of Avi Chomsky, Salem State professor of history and Latin Studies, and the daughter of MIT professor and political activist Noam Chomsky. She is his key U.S. contact as he embarks on a month-long tour that will take him across this country, spreading the sad message of his people.

Chomsky says, according to Department of Energy statistics, one third to half of Salem Harbor Station?s coal came from Columbia during the 1990s. When a power plant is sold, however, there is a period when they don?t have to report such statistics, she said, and the plant has been sold several times in the last few years.

"We?re not trying to make the plant look bad," said Chomsky, who came to Salem State in 1997 from Bates College in Maine. "We?re not asking that they stop buying Columbian coal. We?re listening for them to make a statement for those whose lives are being ruined because of the coal production."

Communities surrounding the Cerrej��ine have been subject to constant noise and dust from blasting, loss of farmland, and contamination of the river that was their main source of water.

According to Perez, the environmental problems are causing people in his region to suffer respiratory and skin diseases, all so the mine can continue producing 84,000 tons of coal daily, at a price of $50 per ton.

Everyone was "bought" along the way, he said, referring to lawyers, judges and community leaders.

Some peasants were bought out by Exxon, but others refused to leave. Two thousand soldiers rousted 300 families living in Tabaco, destroying it completely in August of 2001 to make way for the expansion of the mine.

Last May, a delegation of 45 people from several South American countries visited the region and observed coal dust blowing from the trains traveling 150 kilometers from the mine to Puerto Bolivar, the peninsula near Venezuela from which ships bring the coal to U.S. destinations, including Salem.

While the less expensive, low-sulfur coal may be more environmentally friendly and could translate to more cheaply produced energy, it could also be linked to the death squads that massacred 12 indigenous Way?ving near the port owned by the Cerrej��ine, as well as the execution of labor union leaders.

Chomsky is heading up a group to follow the coal route in Columbia this August, a trip arranged through the grassroots organization "Witness for Peace."

She hopes Perez? talk about the other side of globalization at the First Church next month, as well as his appearance at Salem State College on Earth Day, will drum up interest in the 12-day trip to Columbia.

There, the group will meet with human-rights activists, trade unionists and members of Afro-Colombian and indigenous communities, as well as others affected by coal production in Columbia.

Hitting home

In our own living rooms, Salem Access TV has aired "What?s the Cost of Salem?s Coal? The Destruction of Tabaco." Still, said Chomsky, Salem residents have a "low level of awareness" of the city?s connection to human rights violations taking place in the northeastern part of Columbia, both against mine workers and those who live there.

Since 2002, some Salem residents have been involved in bringing the case of the village of Tabaco to the public eye, creating international pressure on the mine to relocate the village?s former residents.

In June of that year, the Salem City Council passed a resolution recognizing that Exxon bulldozed the village and that, in May 2002, the Colombian Supreme Court granted the villagers? request for relocation and reconstruction of their town.

The resolution recognized a series of visits by Colombians who had sought the support of Salem residents. The document asked that any mine expansion be conducted peacefully, and that the villagers be accorded basic human rights.

"As a community hosting a coal-powered facility, we condemn violations of human rights by all actors involved in Columbia?s conflict," read the resolution, including guerilla groups, military interests and U.S. defense contractors.

The resolution was sent to the president of Columbia and the country?s minister of the interior, as well as the Exxon Mobil Corporation. It was sponsored by Salem resident Claudia Chuber, a native of Colombia, who was a city councilor at the time.

"We weren?t advocating that they not buy the coal." she said. "We were just saying the natives were being exploited."

When passed by municipalities, such documents are not able to change much nationally, especially in another country, according to Chuber.

"It was pretty symbolic," she said, "but I was happy it was passed."

In 2006, authorities in Columbia have refused to enforce their own Supreme Court?s decision, and the displaced villagers remain with relatives or in neighboring countries. Perez maintains the owners of the mine are eyeing other nearby villages for demolition.

Salem?s City Council is again looking into the issue, scheduling some time with Perez to meet with the its Subcommittee on Public Health, Safety and the Environment next month. They are also considering a similar resolution to the one passed in the summer of 2002.

Councilor Thomas Furey remembers signing the resolution and calls Perez a "profile in courage."

"The power plant is the goose that laid the golden egg and we need it to stay in Salem," he said. "It?s so critical that we have it, but we need to send a message that products in Columbia shouldn?t be on the backs of the workers."

Furey said he is strongly in favor of continuing such a resolution, and of voicing a policy of zero tolerance for accepting Colombian products as long as the mistreatment continues.

Meeting of the mine

The North Shore Columbia Solidarity Committee formed to further educate people here about the human rights violations. The group is sponsoring Perez? visit next month.

A part of the group?s demands is that representatives from Dominion meet with Perez while he is here. They are also looking for the company to issue a public statement about their intent to take reasonable action to help Colombian mine workers, as well as to increase efforts to seek alternative, renewable forms of energy.

Although previous owners of Salem Harbor Station have met with representatives from Colombia?s La Guajira region in the past, Dominion is just getting used to its new relationship with that country. Dominion?s Neddenien said the company "would be pleased" to meet with Perez, but said it is not making any more promises at this point.

"I think what we need to do is talk with the gentleman and hear what he has to say," said Neddenien. "That?s what we?ve committed to so far."

A spokesperson at the plant said no one there has seen an invitation to meet with Perez, but would be more than willing to.

A few years ago, Francisco Ramz Cuellar, president of a Colombian mining union, came to Salem. Chomsky, who has researched the history of Columbia coal mining and its tragic effects on the country today, translated into English the labor leader?s book, "The Profits of Extermination: How U.S. Corporate Power is Destroying Columbia."

In Columbia, it was published amid death threats.

Jeff Crosby, president of the North Shore Labor Council, an organization of 50 local unions from Saugus to Cape Ann, has met with Cuellar a couple of times, including once in BogotᬠD.C., Colombia?s capital.

Crosby compares the responsibility Salem Harbor Station has to the people of Columbia to that of large clothing companies that rely on sweatshop seamstresses.

"Clearly, any company that receives raw or finished materials from suppliers or vendors in other countries has a responsibility to see to it that the human rights and labor rights of workers involved in the production are protected," he said.

Crosby added that even if the plant takes only a small amount of coal from the Cerrej��ine, the plant?s owner still has a responsibility.

"If you?re going to globalize profit-making, if you?re going to globalize corporations, then you have to globalize human rights," said Crosby.

James "Red" Simpson of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers 326, with which Salem power plant workers are affiliated, was contacted by the Gazette this week, but he refused to comment.

Perez spoke to Professor Chomsky?s World History class Monday morning, telling students that before the mine, his people lived a good life, but now can?t even afford to send their children to school.

"That was my house," he said to the class, pointing to a slide image of himself in front of bulldozed rubble. "We have nothing now. That?s because we tried to oppose the company, so we were punished by the company."

Perez, a father of 10 children, is jeopardizing his own life by publicizing the plea of his countrymen. In the summer of 2000, he was attacked by armed security officials at the mine as he tried to film the conditions surrounding his village.

When asked about his level of danger, Perez says much has already been taken from him.

"But we feel," he said, "that we have to make ourselves heard."

* * *

Jose Julio Perez will present "The Destruction of Tabaco," followed by a discussion, Sunday, April 9, 7 p.m., at First Church, 316 Essex St., and will be recognized Monday, April 10, at an Earth Day celebration at Salem State College.
----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/



Posted by nscolombia at 7:10 PM EST
Updated: 27 March 2006 7:29 PM EST
22 March 2006
Jose Julio in the Maritimes (translated from French with Google)
For original article in French: http://www.src.ca/regions/atlantique/2006/03/21/008-NB-charbon.shtml Radio-Canada.ca - Atlantic Area
The Maritime ones on burning coals
Update Wednesday March 22, 2006, 9. 43.
.
The Colombian Jose Julio Perez denounces in New Brunswick and in News-Scotland abuses mining industry in its country, which supplies these coal provinces "I am here for saying that mining industry violates the human rights in Colombia", it declared.

It is the message which it delivered to the minister Energy of New Brunswick, Brenda Fowlie. It asked him to make pressure on the Colombian government so that it changes the practices of its mining industry. Mrs. Fowlie promised to Mr. Perez a meeting with representatives of the company Énergie N-b.­ for the following day.

Mr. Perez told that in 2001, approximately 200 soldiers and police officers invaded the village of Tobacco, in Colombia. The Perez family, like 70 others, were forced to leave their houses and their farms to allow the expansion of Cerrejon, the most significant coal mine to sky open to the world.

Mr. Perez added that Tobacco does not exist any more and that expatriés were never compensated. Meanwhile, of the hundreds of trade-union representatives were assassinated in the country.

The minister Brenda Fowlie

From the closing of the two last coal mines of Cape-Breton, the companies Energy N-B. and Nova Scotia Power produce 16 % of their electricity with coal coming from Colombia.

Last year, Energy N-B. the totality of its coal of the Carrejon mine bought at the cost of 45 million dollars. It is a coal has handsome price, but according to Mr. Perez, it is dearly paid in violation of the rights of the person.

Jose Julio Perez known as was satisfied with its first day in Canada. It intends to repeat this exercise of sensitizing with Nova Scotia Power and of the members of the government of News-Scotland during next days.




Posted by nscolombia at 12:46 PM EST
Updated: 22 March 2006 12:51 PM EST
A day with Jose Julio

[colombia] A day with Jose Julio
1 message
Avi Chomsky <achomsky@salemstate.edu> Tue, Mar 21, 2006 at 2:17 PM
Reply-To: Avi Chomsky <achomsky@salemstate.edu>
To: North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee <colombia@listserv.salemstate.edu>
Hello, Colombia list friends...
Jose Julio Perez arrived Sunday night from Colombia, after many months of planning and work getting him a visa, organizing the trip, etc.
He spent yesterday (Monday) in Salem, before taking off in the afternoon for Canada, where Garry Leech and the Atlantic Regional Solidarity Network have organized a week of events for him. Then he's off to Arkansas, Los Angeles, and DC before returning to spend 10 days in Salem from April 9-19.
Yesterday he spoke in two classes at Salem State, and had a long interview with the Salem Gazette which is scheduled to appear this Friday. They also took a lot of pictures, both at the college and at the power plant and coal pile.
Although I've heard the story of the displacement of Tabaco many times, and told it myself many times, and seen and shown the video we have on the destruction of Tabaco, talking face to face with Jose Julio, who lived through the events and lost his own home and livelihood to the mine that supplies our coal, visiting the coal pile with him, looking anew at my own slides of Tabaco through his eyes, and hearing and seeing pictures of life in the communities on the periphery of the mine today was an overwhelming experience.
We have a busy schedule organized for Jose Julio in April, including several public events on the North Shore, trips to Brown, Dartmouth, and University of Southern Maine, and meetings and interviews with local officials and hopefully with the power plant. Please try to come, if you can, to one or more of the events!
Sunday, April 9, 7:00, First Church in Salem
Monday, April 10, 7:00, Earth Day at Salem State
Friday, April 14, 7:00, The Bookstore, Gloucester
And please think about coming on our delegation this summer (August 1-11) to the coal region of Colombia to see it for yourself!
Finally IF YOU HAVE ANY TIME TO HELP with driving, translating, attending meetings, or just spending some time with Jose Julio while he's here in April, please let me know!!
Thanks,
Avi
----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/






Posted by nscolombia at 12:28 PM EST
11 March 2006
Jose Julio Perez visit
Jose Julio Perez visit

[colombia] Jose Julio Perez
1 message
Avi Chomsky <achomsky@salemstate.edu> Sat, Mar 4, 2006 at 9:56 PM
Reply-To: Avi Chomsky <achomsky@salemstate.edu>
To: North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee <colombia@listserv.salemstate.edu>
Hello, list members,
I wanted to update you all on the tour we are planning for Jose Julio Perez, a representative from the community of Tabaco, an Afro-Colombian village violently displaced in 2001 by the mine that supplies coal to the Salem Harbor Power Station.
Some of you may remember the visits by Armando Perez and Remedios Fajardo, back in 2002, Francisco Ruiz, in 2003, and Francisco Ramirez, in 2002 and 2004, and how powerful it has been to hear the voices of those affected by the production of the coal that we consume.
Jose Julio's tour will begin on March 19, and he'll be visiting Nova Scotia (where Garry Leech, who many of you will also remember, now teaches; Nova Scotia is another major importer of Colombian coal. See www.colombiajournal.org and www.arsn.ca for more information about Colombia in general, and Canadian solidarity, respectively.); Arkansas, Los Angeles, and Washington DC, before coming to New England for 10 days from April 9-19.
His schedule right now looks like this:
Sun. April 9 7:00 First Church in Salem, present a showing of "The Destruction of Tabaco"
Mon. April 10 7:00 Salem State College Earth Day celebration. Jose Julio will be presented with an Environmental Justice Award.
Tues. April 11 Dartmouth College
Wed. April 12 University of Southern Maine
Thurs. April 13 Meetings with local officials in Salem
Fri. April 14 Presentation of _The Profits of Extermination_ at The Bookstore, Gloucester
Tues. April 18 Brown University
Because the foreign-owned mine operates with virtual impunity in Colombia, Jose Julio and the other villagers who have been displaced believe that the only way to challenge the mine on its violations of human and environmental rights is through international public pressure. They are asking us, as consumers of the coal, to demand that the mine negotiate a collective relocation agreement with the villagers who have been displaced.
Our campaign will continue this summer with a delegation to the coal-producing region of Colombia from August 1-11, coinciding with an international conference that Garry is organizing there.
I'm eager to hear ANY ideas you might have for events, and other ways of drawing public attention to Jose Julio's message, while he is here in April.
Avi
----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/






Posted by nscolombia at 12:28 AM EST
Updated: 11 March 2006 7:45 PM EST
21 January 2006
information packet for Jose Julio's tour in March-April 2006

FROM: Avi Chomsky

Friends--

I'm attaching an information packet for Jose Julio's tour in March-April 2006.

This is a work-in-progress so please let me know what you think.

So far, it is looking like the tour will shape up like this:

March 20-27 Nova Scotia

March 27-31 Arkansas

April 3-6 Wash. DC (April 5 at American)

April 7-15 Salem (April 10), Boston area, Univ. of Southern Maine (April 12), Dartmouth (week of the 10-14), other New England events TBA (Brown, Assumption, others)

This is just beginning to be put into place, so if others are interested we should talk about trying to fit them in.

Avi...

jose julio info packet.doc


Posted by nscolombia at 12:22 PM EST
14 January 2006

Untitled Document

"Killer Coke" Or Innocent Abroad?
Controversy over anti-union violence in Colombia has colleges banning Coca-Cola

www.businessweek.com

From: Avi Chomsky

A pretty comprehensive article about the Coke issues.

Avi

 

 

"Killer Coke" Or Innocent Abroad?

JANUARY 23, 2006


Controversy over anti-union violence in Colombia has colleges banning Coca-Cola

It's early monday morning, but Ray Rogers has the full attention of some 70 students in a Rutgers University classroom. For nearly half an hour, the 61-year-old labor activist rails against Coca-Cola Co. (), taking the beverage giant to task for allegedly turning a blind eye as eight employees of Coke bottlers in Colombia were killed and scores more were threatened or jailed on trumped-up terrorism charges over the past decade.

"The reality is that the world of Coca-Cola is a world of lies, deceptions, corruption, gross human rights and environmental abuses!" thunders Rogers, a legendary union activist who cut his teeth organizing a highly publicized campaign against textile maker J.P. Stevens & Co. in the 1970s. He slams his hand on a desk. "But this is where it's going to stop! We're going to put an end to this once and for all! How many of you will stand up against Coke?" One by one, roughly half the students lift their hands. In response to Rogers' charges, a Coke spokeswoman says the activist "has no facts to support his claims."

Despite the vast generation gap and Coke's rebuttals, Rogers' diatribes are starting to resonate on campuses from New Haven to Ann Arbor, where his "Killer Coke" campaign has become the latest cause célèbre among student activists -- "the new Nike," as one puts it. At dozens of schools, small but feisty groups of students have demonstrated against the company -- like the ones who staged a "die-in" during a 2004 Yale University speech by then-CEO Douglas N. Daft. Already, about 20 colleges in the U.S. and abroad have halted sales of Coke on campus, in part over the Colombia controversy.

In December, Rogers bagged his two biggest victories to date when New York University and the University of Michigan banished Coke. For two years, NYU student activists had demanded an independent investigation of worker conditions in Colombia. "The students felt it has been two years, and nothing's been done," says Arthur Tannenbaum, a faculty spokesman at NYU. In response, a Coke spokesperson says the company would accept an outside review, but only if the findings aren't admissible in a lawsuit filed in Miami by the International Labor Rights Fund on behalf of the slain Colombian workers -- a condition the ILRF has not accepted.

PICKING UP STEAM
Coke officials maintain that the company has been unfairly tarred by union activists who have distorted the facts about Colombia. Perpetuating "urban myth is more exciting [for activists] than knowing what the facts are," says Edward E. Potter, a longtime corporate labor lawyer who joined Coke as global labor relations director last March. Coke officials say only one of the eight workers was killed on the premises of the Coke bottling plant owned by Bebidas y Alimentos de Urabá. Also, they say, the other deaths -- which all occurred off-premises -- were byproducts of Colombia's four-decade-long civil war among leftist guerrillas, government forces, and paramilitaries, which has resulted in at least 35,000 deaths, including 2,500 trade unionists since the mid-1980s alone.

What's more, an important global coalition of labor unions has refused to support Rogers' anti-Coke crusade, which seeks reparations for the families of victims. "We have no evidence of complicity by Coke in the killing of workers," says Ron Oswald, general secretary of the International Union of Foodworkers in Geneva, whose members include tens of thousands of Coke workers worldwide. Some government and union leaders believe that the militant union leading the crusade, SINALTRAINAL, a Colombian union of food-industry workers known for its socialist views, has zeroed in on Coke as a way to get the broader issue of union violence heard around the world. "Out of one killing they built up a campaign," says Colombian Vice-President Francisco Santos Calderón. "In the end they're hurting Colombia" by making it seem like a dangerous place to do business.

Still, Rogers seems to be picking up steam. The activist says he has been contacted by students at more than 100 other colleges looking to initiate similar protests, including Washington's Georgetown University and Atlanta's Emory University, whose endowment includes large holdings of Coca-Cola stock. Rogers also believes he can score a win in Britain in the coming months when the National Union of Students, a purchasing co-op for more than 200 student unions there, debates whether to renew Coke's beverage contract.

The college deals -- collectively worth perhaps a few million dollars -- represent a negligible loss of business for the $23 billion soft-drink titan, which now generates 85% of its operating income outside the U.S. But the campaign is heating up at an awkward moment for Coca-Cola, which was recently eclipsed by PepsiCo () in market value. Plus, Coke is pinning a revival on a new marketing plan set to launch in the spring around the theme "Welcome to the Coke Side of Life." "I know the impact we're having on Coke, and I know it's getting worse," says Rogers.

Beyond bad PR, the Colombia controversy illustrates the challenges facing all multinationals that do business in unstable places. As Nike Inc. () learned in its recent sweatshop labor flap, companies are increasingly being held accountable for everything that occurs all the way through the supply chain, even when it involves independent contractors, as is the case with Coke and its Colombian bottlers. In the end, some crisis-management experts believe Coke may be able to defuse the Colombia situation only by consenting, as Nike did, to an outside review, and by taking public steps to better ensure the safety of bottling company workers in countries such as Colombia. "You just can't...say: 'They're the bottlers, we just sell the syrup,"' says Edward F. Ahnert, a former president of ExxonMobil Foundation who teaches corporate social responsibility at Southern Methodist University's business school.

BREAKING THE UNION
What has transpired in Colombia over the past decade is a matter of debate. According to union leaders from SINALTRAINAL, on whose behalf the 2001 Miami lawsuit was filed, several years of violence and killings of Coke workers intensified on Dec. 5, 1996, when a right-wing paramilitary squad showed up at the gate of the Coke bottling plant owned by Bebidas y Alimentos in Carepa, a small town in northwestern Colombia's banana-growing region. The paramilitaries shot and killed Isidro Segundo Gil, the gatekeeper and a member of the union's executive board. An hour later they kidnapped another union leader at his home and torched the union's offices.

The following day the paramilitaries returned to the plant, called workers together, and gave them until 4 p.m. to sign a statement resigning from the union on stationery the unionists claim bore the bottler's letterhead -- or else. Many union members resigned on the spot; 27 even quit their jobs and fled to other cities, fearing they would be killed if they stayed. Luis Hernán Manco, who was president of the union at the time, was summoned by the plant manager to a local tavern, where several paramilitaries warned him and other union leaders to leave town. "They said: 'If you want to live beyond today, get out of this area.' I knew they were serious," recalls Manco, now 59, who has been in hiding for nine years. For two more months, union leaders claim, the paramilitaries camped outside the front gate of the Carepa plant.

The union alleges that Coke and its local bottler were complicit in these acts. (Both companies deny the charge.) Among the claims made in the lawsuit is an alleged 1996 public statement by Ariosto Milan Mosquera, the plant manager at Carepa, that "he had given an order to the paramilitaries to carry out the task of destroying the union." (The plant's owner, Richard Kirby of Key Biscayne, Fla., denies his managers gave any such orders.) Over the intervening nine years, in addition to the eight who died, 48 others have been forced into hiding, and 65 have received death threats, SINALTRAINAL leaders say. In Bucaramanga, a midsize city in northeastern Colombia, five union members who work at the Coke plant there were jailed for six months in 1995 on terrorism charges that were later dropped for lack of evidence. They were accused of planting an explosive device in the plant, but three of them who spoke to BusinessWeek said they doubt such a device ever existed.

Union leaders insist Coke could have halted the violence by immediately -- and publicly -- repudiating the paramilitaries. "If the company had condemned the first death, there probably wouldn't have been any more," says Edgar Paez, director of international relations for SINALTRAINAL. A Coke spokesman disputes that. "Our bottlers have been quite open in condemning the violence," he says, pointing to local newspaper ads they published that denounced the violence. Paez also claims the Coca-Cola bottler financially benefited from the paramilitaries' actions, since they broke the union and allowed the bottler to replace many of its full-time employees with much cheaper part-time and temporary workers. Plant owner Kirby denies that charge and says he suffered, too: His wife's sister was kidnapped by the paramilitaries, who also burned four of his trucks and tried to coerce Kirby into selling his plant to them on the cheap, which he declined to do. "Nobody tells the paramilitaries what to do. They tell you," he says.

There's no clear path for Coke to mitigate the controversy. Nike, after its initial reluctance to engage its critics, was able to resolve the allegations that it used sweatshop labor; the sneaker giant imposed tougher workplace standards on its suppliers and invited outside groups to help monitor their compliance. In April, Coke released the results of a study by Cal Safety Compliance Corp., a Los Angeles consultant that specializes in workplace audits, which found no current instances of anti-union violence or intimidation at Coke bottling plants in Colombia. But union activists and students were unmoved, since Coke had paid for the study, and demanded that the company agree to an independent investigation of its Colombian operations. At first, Coke said yes, but the plan hit an impasse over the findings' admissibility in the ongoing lawsuit, from which Coke was dropped as a defendant by the judge in 2003. (The bottlers remain defendants.)

Activist Rogers is demanding that Coke pay reparations to the families of the slain and displaced Colombian workers, noting that the company came up with $192.5 million to settle a racial-discrimination class action in the U.S. in 2000. In Bogotá, SINALTRAINAL's Paez says each survivor should get regular payments equal to the monthly salary received by Coke's CEO. "What is a life worth?" he asks. A Coke spokeswoman responds: "We were not complicit in what happened, so it wouldn't make sense for us to pay reparations." But for Coke, resolving the legal questions and diffusing the Colombia controversy may be two different things.


By Dean Foust and Geri Smith, with Elizabeth Woyke in New York

Posted by nscolombia at 8:55 PM EST
Updated: 14 January 2006 9:07 PM EST
5 January 2006
U. of Michigan Becomes 10th College to Join Boycott of Coke - New York Times
U. of Michigan Becomes 10th College to Join Boycott of Coke - New York Times The New York Times

December 31, 2005

U. of Michigan Becomes 10th College to Join Boycott of Coke

When students at the University of Michigan return to campus next week after the holiday break, they will find the Coke machines and fountain dispensers empty.

The university, which has 50,000 students on three campuses, on Thursday became the 10th college to stop selling Coca-Cola products because of concerns arising from accusations about the company's treatment of workers in bottling plants in Colombia and environmental problems in India.

A Coke spokeswoman, Kari Bjorhus, said yesterday in a statement that the company hoped the Michigan decision was temporary.

She said Coca-Cola was looking at ways to conduct an independent third-party study of the situation in Colombia.

Labor activists have said that Coca-Cola, through its Latin American bottlers, has been complicit in the deaths of eight union leaders and in continued harassment of unionized employees.

In India, a different group of activists have accused Coke of polluting the soil and groundwater near several bottling plants, of severely reducing groundwater levels in drought-prone areas and of failing to install adequate filtration systems that would remove pesticides from the water used to make its products.

The activists, led by two groups, Corporate Accountability International and the Campaign to Stop Killer Coke, have found a sympathetic ear on college campuses.

Within the last year, New York University, Rutgers University in New Jersey and Santa Clara University in California, among others, have stopped selling Coke products, which include Sprite, Dasani water, Minute Maid juice and Powerade sports drinks.

Coke has denied all of the accusations. In April, the company announced the findings of a report by CSCC, a consulting firm in Los Angeles. The report, which was paid for by Coke, addressed current conditions, not the deaths, which occurred from 1989 to 2002. It found no violations or abuses of labor or human rights in Coke's bottling plants in Colombia.

Unsatisfied, the University of Michigan and five universities that still sell Coke products have called for an independent investigation of both the Colombia and India situations.

The University of Michigan had set today as a deadline for Coke to select an auditor and agree on the terms of the investigation. But talks between the company and the university broke down.

Coke says the accusations about India are groundless, also. It says that its use of water in India has become more efficient and that it has begun harvesting rainwater to help return it to underground sources.

In the fiscal year 2005, the University of Michigan had 13 contracts for selling Coca-Cola products, totaling $1.4 million. The university did not have an exclusive contract with Coke and it will continue to sell beverages from other companies.



Posted by nscolombia at 7:08 PM EST
11 December 2005
Paramilitaries as Proxies
Sun, Dec 11, 2005 at 4:12 PM


To: North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committe
Regarding what Alan said yesterday, I just received this...

Avi

Colombia: Paramilitaries as Proxies

Posted by nscolombia at 10:25 PM EST
10 December 2005
Watchdog Challenges U.S. Drug War in Colombia (see my comments at end)
Common Dreams NewsCenter
Friday, December 09, 2005

Published on Wednesday, December 7, 2005 by the San Francisco Chronicle
Watchdog Challenges U.S. Drug War in Colombia
by C.J. Schexnayder

BOGOTA, Colombia - A U.S. government report to be released next week raises serious questions about the effectiveness of the multibillion-dollar U.S. anti-drug campaign in Colombia, despite moves by the Bush administration to extend the program.

The 52-page report by the Government Accountability Office, an advance copy of which has been obtained by The Chronicle, challenges administration conclusions that the drug interdiction effort known as Plan Colombia -- a five-year program that ends this year -- has reduced the amount of cocaine available in the United States.

The report was skeptical of the statistics the government relied on for its upbeat assessments, calling its information on cocaine production and use problematic. It also said the Office of National Drug Control Policy had failed to fully address previous "recommendations for improving illicit drug data collection and analysis."

On Nov. 9 in Bogota, John Walters, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, said Plan Colombia had been responsible for a substantial increase in the street price of cocaine in the United States and a drop in its quality from Colombia, which supplies an estimated 90 percent of the world's cocaine, and an estimated $65 billion in illegal drugs to the U.S. market.

"There were those who did not believe it was possible to change the availability of cocaine in the United States," Walters said. "What we're announcing today is, there's no question that's happened."

But the GAO, the nonpartisan investigative arm of Congress, specifically criticized those figures, saying that they reflected trends that "could reflect law enforcement patterns rather than drug availability patterns" and that the number of U.S. cocaine users remained constant at about 2 million. "Other sources estimate the number of chronic and occasional cocaine users may be as high as 6 million," the report stated.

The GAO also found the White House assessment of the amount of cocaine entering the United States in 2004 -- 325 metric tons to 675 metric tons -- to be too varied to be "useful for assessing interdiction efforts."

In an interview, David Murray, a special assistant to Walters, downplayed the report. "We have more data and more analysts working on this out of our office than anyone," he said. "We feel we have some of the best information in the world on the issue. We are trying to make sense of a business whose very core element is hiding from plain view."

Since 2000, the United States has poured about $6 billion into Latin America to fund antidrug efforts, more than half of it earmarked for Plan Colombia. Its supporters in Colombia say the program is crucial not only for battling the drug trade but also to combat left-wing guerrillas and right-wing paramilitaries involved in the nation's four-decade armed conflict that depend on financing from drug profits.

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) -- the country's largest rebel group -- raked in as much as $1.3 billion in 2003, of which an estimated 45 percent came from cocaine, according to a report released earlier this year by the Joint Intelligence Command, the Colombian equivalent of the U.S. National Security Council. Plan Colombia "is essential for what we do," said Col. Yamlik Moreno of the National Police's antidrug division. "Without the funding ... we would have to reduce our operations by 90 percent."

The U.S.-Colombia strategy, which targets cocaine production at its source, is aimed at reducing supply and driving up prices and thereby discouraging consumption in the United States. Military aid provided by Washington over the years includes combat helicopters, light weapons ranging from machine guns to rocket launchers and intelligence technology as well as advisers, chemicals and fumigation planes to spray coca fields. Just last month, Walters helped inaugurate a $12 million helicopter hanger just north of Bogota.

Colombian officials also say they are winning the drug war and point to an increase in the fumigation of coca fields and record seizures of cocaine. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says the amount of acreage devoted to coca cultivation has been reduced by more than half in the past five years, to about 200,000 acres from 403,551 acres in 2000, while production has fallen more than 45 percent to 149 metric tons last year.

But critics say that spraying has merely pushed coca production into more remote areas and that statistics do not adequately measure the amount of drug each acre produces.

"These antidrug policies have failed to address the real causes, the real structural reasons that Colombia produces drugs," said Francisco Thoumi, an economist at Rosario University in Bogota who has followed the drug trade for more than three decades. "They confront the problem in a short-term limited way, and there is no reason to believe that will change with a new version of Plan Colombia."

Colombia will send its proposal for an extension of Plan Colombia to the U.S. State Department, as required by international protocol, within the next few months. Walters says he is confident the new plan will be accepted by both countries. "We have been clear we intend to continue this policy," he told The Chronicle.

Congress recently approved $712 million in fiscal year 2005-06 for the Andean Counter Drug Initiative, an antidrug aid package for South America.

Last summer, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., requested the GAO study to review official statistics used to evaluate the program.

Grassley noted that GAO criticism was likely to hurt the administration's push to extend the program, at least at its current funding levels.

"While we want to keep a multi-pronged approach with our efforts in Central and South America, we need to ensure that the money that is being provided, for both military and nonmilitary efforts, is being used effectively," said Grassley in an e-mail message. "Basically, it (GAO report) is saying it is very difficult to prove the policies are affecting the overall drug trade."

In Bogota, government officials remain closemouthed about the follow-up to Plan Colombia. President Alvaro Uribe, who has high approval ratings and is expected to run for re-election next year, has been an enthusiastic supporter of the program. But opposition candidates and even some members of the government have started to voice criticisms, noting the lack of tangible results in contrast to the program's high cost over the past six years.

"Under no circumstances are we saying we do not need the aid or that the aid is not important," said Comptroller-General Antonio Hernandez. "The question we have to ask is if this set of actions, efforts and sacrifices ... requires a different path. We are asking if there is another way of approaching the problem. "

Funding the drug war

Since 2000, the Andean Counterdrug Initiative has provided $7.4 billion to seven South American countries: Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, Peru and Venezuela.

The program's centerpiece is Colombia, the source of 90 percent of all cocaine and 70 percent of heroin reaching the United States.

*********

Breakdown of U.S. funds spent fighting the war on drugs in South America From 2000 to 2005, in millions of dollars

2000 - $960*
2001 - $210*

2002 - $645
Venezuela $5
Panama $5
Brazil $6
Ecuador $25
Bolivia $88
Peru $142.5
Colombia $373

2003 $842.5
Venezuela $2.1
Panama $4.5
Brazil $6
Ecuador $31
Bolivia $91
Peru $128
Colombia $580

2004 $738
Venezuela $5
Panama $6.5
Brazil $10
Ecuador $35
Bolivia $91
Peru $116
Colombia $474

2005 $712
Venezuela $3
Panama $6
Brazil $9
Ecuador $26
Bolivia $90
Peru $115
Colombia $463

*In its first two years, Plan Colombia financed antidrug efforts only in Colombia, but since fiscal year 2002 the program has been expanded to more South American nations.

?2005 San Francisco Chronicle

###
-------
Just a couple of comments on the article I just sent -- it does not
even touch on how the arms being sent to Colombia by the U.S.,
supposedly for the war on drugs, are being used by the Colombian
paramilitaries for the kind of thing Americans would not want anything
to do with. A large part of the paramilitaries' agenda is to quell
unrest of labor union leaders in Colombia, when the only purpose of
the labor unions is to bring better working conditions to the people
of the country.

Also, the horrific problems caused by fumigation of cocaine fields is
not discussed either -- this practice is injuring many innocent people
who are running non-coca farms, as no warning is given before
fumigation begins. Not that it would matter much if they did get a
warning, for regular farms are completely destroyed when this happens,
forcing the honest farmers into the ghettos of the large cities to
fight for survival.

--Alan Hanscom

Posted by nscolombia at 4:29 PM EST
1 December 2005
Camilo Mejia

Questions about the war???



Get the facts military recruiters won’t tell you.



Come Hear

Former Staff Sergeant Camilo Mejia





Nicaraguan immigrant Camilo Mejia joined the US Army and then the National Guard to get money for college. In January 2003, he was activated with his National Guard unit. By April, they were on their way to Iraq, where they participated in firefights, saw the killing of civilians, and witnessed the abuse of prisoners. On leave back in the United States, Mejia refused to return to Iraq. He surrendered to authorities in March 2004 and was sentenced to one year in prison. He was released in February 2005.



“I have witnessed the suffering of a people whose country is in ruins and who are further humiliated by the raids, patrols, and curfews of an occupying army.

My experience of this war has changed me forever.” – Camilo Mejia









Monday, December 5, 2005

11:00 am-noon (community time)

The Underground

Ellison Campus Center, Salem State College



Sponsored by The Peace Institute and the Program in Latin American Studies


For more information contact Avi Chomsky; achomsky@salemstate.edu; 978-542-6389


Posted by nscolombia at 12:01 AM EST
Updated: 5 December 2005 10:44 AM EST
17 November 2005

The Salem State College

Peace Institute

Presents

A Panel Discussion

 

IS PEACE POSSIBLE?:

A CROSS-DISCIPLINARY INQUIRY

  

                                  Tim Eddy          Psychology

                                  Rod Kessler       English

                                  Rich Levy          Political Science

                                  Ken MacIver     Anthropology

                                  David Tapley     Biology

 

Each academic discipline offers a different way of organizing knowledge and a unique perspective on the human experience. Some scholars assert human nature is aggressive and destructive; therefore power and weapons are necessary to safeguard security and freedom.  Others believe that culture and environment are crucial in shaping human capabilities.  Come hear what five faculty members have to say on this controversial subject.

 

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 11:00 AM

Martin Luther King, Jr. Rm

(Campus Center)

 

For more information contact: achomsky@salemstate.edu or Bennekh@msn.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

----------------------------------------
North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee: http://home.comcast.net/~nscolombia/



Posted by nscolombia at 10:00 PM EST
Updated: 20 November 2005 5:06 PM EST
14 November 2005
CHAVEZ: INSIDE THE COUP

CHAVEZ: INSIDE THE COUP

“One of the most shocking political exposes of the 21st century”

A Film by Kim Bartley & Donnacha O’Brian Independent Irish Filmmakers who were there!

Question and Answer period with Avi Chomsky professor of Latin American Studies

Jorge Martin, from the Venezuelan grassroots organization Circulo Bolivariano

7:30 PM Thursday, November 17

Unitarian-Universalist Church

28 Mugford St. Marblehead, Mass.

Voluntary Donation: $10

----------------------------------------

Contact: Avi Chomsky

North Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee


Posted by nscolombia at 11:33 AM EST
9 November 2005
MIGUEL FERNANDEZ FREED
Dear friends of Cauca, life and dignity,

Miguel was freed last night.

For Spanish speakers, a message telling a bit of the story of the night is below. I'll paraphrase....

The various social organizations of Cauca went to the DAS (Administrative Security Department) headquarters in Popayan in the evening and waited there a long time. There were confrontations taking place elsewhere in the area between police and indigenous 'squatters' (an oxymoron, but you get what I mean) reclaiming land. They weren't sure what to expect. The district attorney handling his case showed up, then the mayor. Then Miguel left the building.

Here's a translation of the description of that moment in the message below, from one of Miguel's best friends, a leader of a sister campesino organization in Cauca: "The joy was tremendous. Some started to applaud, others shouted chants, the embraces began immediat ely. Tears of elation ran, confusing themselves together with the rain that fell. The embraces continued as journalists asked their questions, and Miguel responded: 'Thank you to everyone, especially the organizations.' The night was a jubilee for everyone. We felt good about all the efforts made. We felt that we won a battle -- and that the struggle continues. Miguel smiled, but looked a bit emaciated. He said that for him too it had been a dday full of anguish."

Thank you all for the actions you have taken demanding Miguel's release -- especially to all those who participated in the Consulate action in Boston.

I have asked the Cauca social organizations to send a new 'communicado'/statement as soon as possible announcing this news, sharing what they've done over recent days, and asking for renewed actions seeking Jose Vicente's release and protection against future attacks for all those who st ruggle for life and dignity. As soon as this arrives, I'll translate it for circulation among all the organizations and unions that have taken action on these cases over the last week.

Again: thank you.

Peace, Phillip Cryan

Ames, Iowa
C 515-708-2364

Hola Hermanos

Todos estabamos pendientes y sabiamos que algo a favor podia acontecer, pero teniamos nuestras dudas pues si esto ha sido un montage politico, cualquier cosa sucederia. Todos llamavamos a la CUT, unos nos llamavamos a otros, el dia no fua tranquilo. Llegaron las 7 p.m. y decidimos irnos hacia las instalaciones del DAS, alli serca nos fuimos agrupando, llegaron de todas las organizaciones, fueron ratos largos alli parados esperando, nos dieron tiempo para ponernos al dia de los ultimos acontecimientos, esa misma noche los indigenas estaban peliando con la pilicia , havian quince heridos pero decian que todo iba bien, otros comentaron sobre la confabulacion del gobernador para partir el proceso del CRIC y de la ACIN, todos presagiamos momentos duros para las organizaciones, en fin nunca han sidi faciles, lo que si estamos de acuerdo es que es un tiempo neuralgico. Cada momento miramos hacia la puerta del DAS y nada, en eso llega la fiscal encargada, luego llego el Alcalde, alguien dijo la cosa se puso buena , parece que si. Efectivamente empeso el proceso, inicialmente salieron algunas cosas que Miguel tenia para poder medio vivir en esa celda, luego aparecio E. Fue una alegria inmensa, algunos empesaron aplaudir, otros a gritar consignas, los abrasos no esperaron , las lagrimas de emocion corrieron confundiendoce con la lluvia que caia, los abrasos se repetian mientras los periodistas preguntaban y

Ariana Flores
Jobs With Justice
3353 Washington St.
Boston, MA 02130
w: 617-524-8778
c: 857-928-2677


Posted by nscolombia at 9:44 PM EST

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