Colombian local elections – as indecisive as predicted

Yesterday I blogged about the Colombian local elections. The results are in, and they are just as indecisive as analyst Simone Bruno predicted in the article I mentioned yesterday.

The Polo Democratico, Colombia’s democratic left party that has been on the rise, won the mayor’s seat in Bogota and the government of the department of Narino. But Uribe’s candidates won the majority of seats. From here, the elections do look like they were very close.

Continue reading “Colombian local elections – as indecisive as predicted”

Local elections in Colombia

A friend of mine, Simone Bruno, wrote a fine article in Spanish on the local and regional elections in Colombia that are taking place today. Some highlights from his piece.

-22 candidates have been assassinated
-8 others were assassinated before announcing their candidacy
-36000 candidates under police protection
-family members of candidates have been murdered

-Many of the assassinations of candidates have been done by the guerrillas. Simone quotes Uribe going on his “democratic tour”, saying: “we have weakened FARC, we have weakened ELN, and dismantled paramilitarism.”

Continue reading “Local elections in Colombia”

A political error, logged for the record

Unsure of what the appropriate forum is for what was essentially a personal political error, I thought I should put it here in my blog, as sort of a public apology. The error I made has to do with this petition:

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/no_way_us-colombia_fta/

A very good group of activists from Colombia and the US put this together to try to build support against the terrible Colombia-US-FTA. As a member of Pueblos en Camino, I sometimes send bulletins of information about Colombia or what we’re doing or our counterparts in Colombia. In this case, my co-collective member Manuel had already circulated the petition and wanted me to circulate it again along with various other pieces of info about Colombian President Uribe’s visit to the US.

The error comes here. There were a couple of paragraphs in the petition that one of our readers pointed out to me the first time we circulated it, and when I read them I also didn’t like them:

The FTA would result, like other treaties with Mexico and Central America, in increased unauthorized migration to the United States. NAFTA has been a disaster for Mexican farmers. It has driven many of them off the land, into the cities and northward to the United States in search of employment and income. If the Colombia FTA passes, we can expect more undocumented migrants.

The FTA would result in more unemployment among U.S. workers and pressure to lower wages in this country. Our workers would be exposed to competition with a labor market that is notorious for its extensive labor and human rights violations. U.S. workers are struggling for a living wage, and this would be a setback in that struggle.

What I should have done was sent the petition around, and afterwards, made some comment or reaction available to its authors. Instead, when I sent the petition, I added the following text before it:

“The petition for the US Congress – a flawed petition, as some of our readers have noted, making various concessions to US politics
– but one that makes some good points and had participation from Colombian activists in its preparation.”

I should not have done this. Manuel’s summary of this error was as follows, and I think he was completely right.

“What I think is a mistake is to qualify the petition-letter as flawed without presenting the reasons for this qualification as an opinion of two people, particularly when this letter is the product of a long and participatory process by many people who are part of the Mingas effort. From my perspective, the letter should have been circulated and included without comments, quoting the source, and the opinions and reactions to it signed and circulated as reactions to the letter. I am afraid that the comment “flawed” qualifies the letter from the editorial perspective of En Camino, which is, in fact not real and unfair to it.”

What were my reasons? Here is what I wrote when asked:

“[The other reader] pointed out that describing “unauthorized migration to the US” as a problem is a kind of concession to anti-immigrant sentiment that views migrants as a “problem” rather than a part of the US economy that serves elite interests. Similarly the argument that FTA would result in a setback for labor rights in the US could be viewed as a concession to privileging US workers, and to the notion that Colombian workers and US workers are intrinsically in competition (I’m not actually sure they are, if you did a sector-based economic analysis).”

But those reasons should have been offered to the authors first, without publicly calling the petition “flawed”. That was unfair and it did allow me to trump the views of all of the activists who worked hard to put this petition together. To them, I apologize.

The Para-Scandal and the Bush Visit in Colombia: An interview with Jorge Robledo

Jorge Robledo has been a Colombian senator with the Polo Democratico Alternativo (PDA), a democratic left party, since 2002. In recent years he has given a national voice to the opposition to the ‘free trade agreement’ between the US and Colombia, which has delivered the country’s public sector industries, resources and territories to multinationals. In recent months, the Polo Democratico has also opened a national debate to expose the connections between the political system and the paramilitaries, death squads linked to the government who are implicated in massive human rights violations, assassinations, massacres, the liquidation of social opposition, and narcotrafficking. Another senator with the PDA, Gustavo Petro, has been instrumental in investigating these connections, and was interviewed during a recent trip to the US on Democracy Now! (http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/03/09/1443229) and WBAI (http://archive.wbai.org/files/mp3/070309_070001wuc.MP3).

With Bush’s visit to the region, US Senators McGovern and Leahy, as well as others in the Democratic party, have challenged Bush’s sponsorship of President Alvaro Uribe Velez. Popular protests against Bush’s visit have taken place all over Latin America. Senator Robledo will be raising questions about the beneficiaries of paramilitarism in Colombia, and its backers, in the US. We interviewed him over the phone on March 9.

Justin Podur: Can you introduce, and explain briefly to readers who don’t know, what the ‘para-scandal’ is, how it came to be exposed, and what its effects have been on politics in Colombia?

Jorge Robledo: Colombia has long had the phenomenon of ‘paramilitarism’. Paramilitaries are armed groups linked with the state. One sector of the paramilitaries was organized by wealthy rural landowners for the purpose of attacking the guerrilla movement, but many paramilitary crimes have been directed against the civilian population. They are closely linked with narcotrafficking and organized crime. This has been the case for at least 20 years. Over this time, the paramilitaries have become a significant political power, in regional governments, municipalities, governorships, the congress, and the senate.

The ‘para-scandal’ is this: in recent months it has come to light that the paramilitaries are connected throughout the political system of the country, and especially the congress and senate. The supreme court has sent some congresspeople and other politicians to jail. According to the national newspaper, El Tiempo, there are 19 more congress members who could end up in jail. No less than the chief of the secret police, DAS (departamento administrativo de seguridad) is in jail. There are publicly available documents signed by congresspeople and paramilitaries, explicit agreements.

But the other part of this scandal that’s less-often discussed, is that all of the paramilitary-connected politicians, almost all of them, are friends of the Uribe government (Colombia’s President is Alvaro Uribe Velez). So even though the scandal is referred to as a scandal of ‘para-politica’, it makes more sense to call it ‘para-Uribismo’.

JP: But the connections between paramilitarism and the state, connections between paramilitaries and politicians, between paramilitaries and the army – these were all well-documented and well-known, and have been for years. What is it that has raised common knowledge to the level of a ‘scandal’?

JR: That’s a million-dollar question, and you’re completely right. Years ago, one of the paramilitary chiefs said that they had 30% of congress in their pockets. This was known. The new part today is that the supreme court has proceeded with an investigation and sent 8 congresspeople to jail.

JP: How far do you think the ‘scandal’ will go? What will its effect be on politics in Colombia?

JR: What we hope is that many more congresspeople who we know are connected to paramilitarism, as well as governors, mayors, and others, end up in jail. This is just the beginning. We know the connections are very deep but we do not know how far the process will be allowed to go. There are very powerful forces who do not want the truth to be known. When the final accounting is done, we know that it will involve business, the armed forces, the judiciary. So we are all wanting to see it pursued and concerned about whether it will go far enough, how far it will implicate the President, for example. Uribe continues to have the polls even though 90% of the paramilitary-connected politicians who have been exposed and punished so far are his friends, people he supported, people who supported him in his campaign.

Manuel Rozental: You mentioned the chief of the secret police, DAS, Jorge Noguera. We know that Noguera is very close to the President, and that the charges against him are very damning of the President and of the US. Can you talk about this?

JR: This is, in the midst of a massive scandal, one of the most scandalous pieces of information. The director of the nation’s secret service, DAS, Jorge Noguera, is in prison for his participation in paramilitary crimes. This is a real scandal because the charges include electoral fraud, assassinations of unionists, academics, activists, the use of president’s own car used for paramilitarism. Noguera was chief of Uribe’s electoral campaign in Magdalena. Uribe has stayed at Noguera’s house various times. These two people are very close. When the charges were coming to light Uribe tried to get Noguera a post with the Colombian Embassy in Italy. When the press challenged him, Uribe became very intemperate, as he often does.

MR: Can you explain also the link between the para-scandal and the ‘peace process’ between the government and the paramilitaries?

JR: The government has accused those of us who are bringing the evidence of ‘para-politica’ or ‘para-uribismo’ to light of trying to ruin this ‘peace process’. So the ‘peace process’ was started by the national government in 2002-2003. It was a process to pardon the paramilitaries from their crimes and resolve the legal problem, to legalize them, giving some of them light sentences, not amnesty but a very generous pardon. This process was supported by some of the politicians who are in jail now. Part of the ‘peace process’ was that the paramilitaries confess their crimes, their connections, and their relations. And in these confessions, the paramilitaries are saying things but they have not yet exposed the main connections. They have confessed some of their links to the military, Salvatore Mancuso, the paramilitary chief, talked about connections to various brigades of the army, but very little of the connections with politicians has been brought to light through the ‘peace process’.

JP: Some people close to Uribe have proposed, as a solution to the para-scandal and the loss of credibility by politicians linked to paramilitarism, the closure of Congress. What do you think of that ‘solution’?

JR: That is correct. One of the Uribistas, Marta Lucia Ramirez, who was the Defense Minister, about two weeks ago proposed that congress be closed. We in the PDA frankly opposed this because in Colombia’s conditions, there are no laws to permit the closure of congress. Congress cannot be revoked. To do so would be a break from judicial order, and this would benefit the president who would become a dictator. To change the norms to close the congress, they would basically have to have a coup. We have called this an ‘auto-golpe’, or a ‘self-coup’, which is what President Fujimori did in Peru. It’s important to remember that nearly the totality of those implicated in paramilitarism are Uribistas. Not all of congress is involved, and those who are, are all Uribistas. So it’s unacceptable that the solution be to close the congress. The effect would be to throw out those who are denouncing paramilitary control and connections to congress and hand all power to the Presidency, whose role in paramilitarism has not yet been investigated or determined.

There is another important point of legality to consider. If Ramirez considers that congress is illegitimate and should be closed, presumably because of the evidence that has arisen of widespread electoral fraud organized in part by the paramilitaries, then she has to also consider that these same votes helped to elect the President. If congress’s mandate is revoked, she’d have to revoke the mandate of the President also. She is not talking about doing that, and so this is all manipulation in order to try to hide the political responsibility of the President (not the legal responsibility) for the ‘para-politica’.

JP: Your political work has been devoted to opposing the ‘free trade agreement’. Can you explain this work and, are there any connections between ‘free trade’ and the ‘para-scandal’?

JR: From before I got to congress, in the 1990s, I was organizing against neoliberalism, which is now called ‘free trade’. For nearly five years since I have been in congress we opposed the free trade agreement. The free trade agreement is not to integrate the economies of Colombia and the US, but to annex Colombia’s economy to US monopolies and multinationals. This is easy to demonstrate. It is the same model that the US imposes on all countries. In the text of the free trade agreement, the White House declares its interests, and they are imposed on countries like Colombia. This imperialist imposition makes us a colony. It has practically ruined our agriculture and industry. It is responsible for much of the barbarity, corruption and horror we have experienced. It is responsible for the deterioration of labor rights, the environment, poverty, and unemployment, for the past 17 years since the economing ‘opening’ in 1990.

This whole ‘para-politica’, is a project of the Right. The Right is the agent of neoliberalism, close to White House, close to Washington. The Right in Colombia’s congress has supported all the neoliberal reforms, since they ruined the economy with the ‘opening’ of 1990, privatizating state enterprises, giving privileges to foreign investors. As the economy has been devastated, the paramilitaries and the ‘para-politicos’ have seen their fortunes grow. Their wealth doesn’t come from the national economy, but from kidnapping, crime, the seizure of land.

MR: They would have us believe that Colombia is unique for the level of violence it faces and the paramilitary strategy. But if you look at Latin America’s history you see the same strategy was used with the death squads in El Salvador and Guatemala or the Contras in Nicaragua. The strategy goes beyond paramilitarism and the US is always behind it.

JR: Everything happening in Colombia has to do one way or another with Washington. We’re in the orbit of the emprie, by way of Plan Colombia. Plan Colombia of 2000 did more than just impose a way of managing ‘narcotrafficking’. There were also 20 pages of small type in the Plan that detailed the reorganization of Colombia’s economy.

So if Plan Colombia imposed an economic, political, and military model on us from the US, then we wonder how it is possible that the US Embassy and State Department don’t know about paramilitarism in this country. How can paramilitary crimes be so pervasive without the US knowing about it, or being involved? We’d like to know how the US is involved, and we’ll know more when large numbers of Americans demand that their government assume responsibility for paramilitarism.

MR: Can you speak a bit more about Plan Colombia, now entering its second phase?

JR: Plan Colombia was designed between the US and Colombia with the proposal of reducing production, processing, traffic of drugs by 50%. That was its basic objective. Not to end narcotrafficking, but to reduce it by 50%. To this end, over $1 billion from the US and over $4 billion from Colombia were spent. The money was spent on ‘security’, fumigation, helicopters, mercenaries, and so on. This is well known.

But it also has another aspect that we have tried to raise, the small print connecting Plan Colombia to economic changes, and this is how imperialism covers its ‘free’ support. They came to ‘save’ us but the fine print says for example that Colombia has to join the free trade agreement. The fine print outlines the importance of Colombia getting foreign investment – ie., to give the country to US investors. The state enterprises, energy, banks, were all given notice in the fine print. And everything there has come to pass.

Another thing to say about Plan Colombia is that it’s a failure. The objective was to reduce trafficking by 50%. But all analysts agree that prices haven’t risen: prices are the simplest and most effective way of knowing that supply hasn’t been reduced. So it is a failure to reduce the drug traffic.

I see it as an imperialist pretext for the US to get involved in our country and loot our economy.

JP: Uribe’s habit, like Bush’s, is to accuse those who oppose him of being ‘terrorists’. He has done so with the Polo Democratico. What is the intention behind these smear campaigns and how can they be defeated?

Remember that Bush and Uribe are right-wing spokespeople for the global right wing. This right wing is currently defending torture as a technique of criminal investigation, this right wing invaded Iraq with the support of Uribe, who supports that invasion to this day. These are characters of the extreme right, which has been using ‘terrorism’ to justify everything. Everything they do justify by ‘terrorism’. Every opposition is stigmatized as terrorism.

Uribe gave a speech recently saying the passage of the free trade agreement was a victory against terrorism. That implies that those of us who opposed free trade are friends of terrorism. The PDA, folks like Gustavo Petro, have exposed the ‘para-politica’, or ‘para-Uribismo’, and so Uribe’s tactic is to distract people. He has had some success in his aggression against us. He called us ‘terrorists in civilian clothing’ – he’s trying to imply we are guerrillas or friends of the guerrilla. He wants to polarize.

We are trying to say there are more than two positions. We have a third position, we don’t have any faith in violence, neither in violence of the paramilitaries nor of the guerrilla. Our manipulative president makes insinuations to paint democrats as guerrillas. This is a political attack on us partly because, and we have to admit this, partly because the guerrillas are at an all-time low of prestige, because Colombians are sick of violence.

JP: Colombia’s democratic left parties have suffered terror and assassinations like Colombia’s social movements generally. How does PDA organize in such a context? What are the risks you face? What are the possibilities for the future?

JR: There is, unfortunately, a long history of political violence in Colombia. In the 1940s and 1950s, we had ‘La Violencia’ of Liberals and Conservatives, the two parties of Colombia’s oligarchy killed each other for 15 years, with 400,000 killed. After that there were various stages of guerrilla movements, which were favored by Colombia’s complicated geography and size, many different guerrilla organizations, all facing the establishment with a left position.

In the 1980s, as part of a peace process, a party called Union Patriotica was created. That party was destroyed by the establishment, who first insinuated they were friends of the guerrilla, and then killed them. This was a real, dramatic massacre of thousands, for which the Colombian government could be called to account in international courts.

So this is a permanent part of our history. The number of people who have been killed for their involvement in political parties, unions, social movements, guerrillas, is immense.

In this context, Uribe’s practice of linking the polo with the guerrilla is shown to be an extremely irresponsible thing to do. In the case of the PDA it’s made even worse, because we are a democratic left, a coalition of many forces, and one of our points of unity is that we do not use violence in politics. We don’t make our demands by way of arms. We don’t agree with kidnapping or assassination, irrelevant of the goals.

MR: There are multiple levels of ‘para-politica’. At the local, regional, municipal levels, we have seen the infiltration of the state by the paramilitaries. At the national level, the investigation is getting closer to Uribe. And internationally, it is impossible to believe the US is not behind much of this. Democratic senators like McGovern and Leahy of the US are starting to say publicly that Uribe is not just an observer in what is happening with paramilitarism. Bush in his visit is saying that he supports Uribe because Uribe is getting to the bottom of paramilitarism. So we have Bush protecting Uribe, who is actually acting on behalf of the US.

JR: That’s why I use the term ‘para-Uribismo’. All the congresspeople who have gone to prison already are Uribistas. Of the 19 in line for judgement, 17 are Uribistas. One of the famous documents, the document of Santa Fe Ralito, signed by paramilitaries and congresspeople, the congresspeople who signed were Uribistas. The director of DAS is an Uribista. The organization ARCOIRIS, with 83 congresspeople from paramilitary-controlled zones, 90% are Uribistas. This is not to say that all Uribistas are paras, but it does say the phenomenon is that these are friends of the president. This is understood in the exterior, and democratic senators in the US like McGovern and Leahy have noticed as much. Leahy said in El Tiempo that the US government must correct its support for Uribe. Leahy said ‘someone explain to me who we are working with in Colombia.’

We in the PDA insist that these are political, not just penal, responsibilities for Uribe. He has to explain why so many of his friends are involved. And we also want to know how far is the US involved? The US embassy is full of CIA, DEA, FBI, and they don’t have any idea what is happening with paramilitarism? It is not credible.

JP: Do US officials have the moral high ground to ask questions like: ‘Who exactly are we involved with in Colombia?’ Should they not just ask, more simply, ‘Who exactly are we?’

JR: Good question. And we do not know with precision how involved the US has been, but we do know that Plan Colombia was voted in by both Democrats and Republicans. On the other hand, the attitude of any such Democratic politician is very helpful. And we don’t want to say they’re all with Bush, and we have to work with everyone who can help. For there to be people in the US looking for truth is important. The big battle of PDA and Colombia is the search for truth and Uribe is doing everything to prevent this, that’s why he tries to silence us. If he can prevent the truth from getting out, then every one of our problems will be made worse. So for people outside the country, in Europe, in the US, to be raising questions, is very important! It’s a big help

Uribe has two things working in his favor. Less than a year ago he was re-elected, with significant support, and that makes the political fight against him for two reasons. First, he is seen, internally and externally, the leader of the struggle against the guerrillas. He is able to take advantage of the war-weariness of Colombians. People are so sick of violence that the result is a society that is permissive and tolerant of the kinds of measures Uribe has passed. Second, Uribe is a cynical, professional manipulator.

These two things combined have given Uribe enough support to move. The US says ‘he’s our guy over there’. He’s contained the indigenous rebellion, the opposition struggles, the campaigns against free trade, all things the US doesn’t like. In the US, Bush was able to get the free trade agreement passed without the Democrats. But this fight isn’t over. I don’t have illusions about the Democrats, Colombia doesn’t matter much to them, it’s a transaction between politicians to them. But when Bush talked to El Tiempo last week he was pessimistic about various matters.

MR: What is the future of the PDA in this context?

JR: The present is very positive. We’ve managed to unite 99% of the democratic left in Colombia. There is no precedent for that. We have 18 members of congress. We had 2.6 million votes for Carlos Gaviria in the presidency.

In this battle with the government of Uribe, free trade, and the para-politica, I don’t mean to be immodest, but we have struggled well. Supporters of democracy in Colombia see us sympathetically. I’m optimistic, we’re in conditions to advance rapidly. Uribe has para-uribismo, he has no solutions for the country, for problems of poverty and development and violence. We have an option, we have a chance in 2010 and we’ll see. We should be able to actually create an effective alternative.

MR: How is Bush to be welcomed in Colombia?

JR: There have been huge demonstrations in Bogota and elsewhere. There are mobilizations in all universities against Bush, and on Monday we will have a concentration near the Plaza in Bogota and it will be good. There are many things in the media. Colombia is starting to wake up like so many Latin American countries, to struggle for sovereignty, national independence, opposition to imperialism and neoliberalism. This is happening in Colombia.

Justin Podur is a writer and editor of ZNet (www.zmag.org) and a member of the Pueblos en Camino collective (www.en-camino.org).

Manuel Rozental is part of the communications team for the Association of Indigenous Councils of Northern Cauca (ACIN – www.nasaacin.net) and a member of the Pueblos en Camino collective (www.en-camino.org).

The new generation of paramilitaries

Things are moving fast in Colombia. I’ll try to get some things out here over the next few days.

I noted a few days ago that one of the key witnesses in the current Salvatore Mancuso hearings, Yolanda Izquierdo, was murdered. Just a little later, President Alvaro Uribe Velez threatened former members of M-19, a guerrilla group that went into politics at tremendous cost to themselves (many, many of them were murdered, many others imprisoned, and so on, while the people who killed them are free as can be, uninvestigated and unpunished), by calling them “Terrorists dressed as civilians”. Uribe was taking a desperate shot because his own links to paramilitaries are being uncovered.

A couple of days after Uribe’s “terrorists dressed as civilians” comment, various members of social organizations, unions, and alternative media folks received death threats signed by the next generation of paramilitaries, a group calling themselves the “Black Eagles”. So, we have one group of paramilitaries confessing, “demobilizing”, and “reintegrating” into society – giving them the opportunity to openly infiltrate every part of society – and another group “rearming” and eagerly taking up the slack.

I’ve republished the threat email below, thanks to the colombia support network, and the original in spanish below that. You’ll note it uses the exact same language as Uribe used.

CSN ‘s Note: In the past several days, Senator Gustavo Petro of the Polo Democratico Party, the alternative opposition party whose Presidential candidate finished second in the 2006 elections with 2.6 million votes, has been presenting information uncovered showing the links between the illegal paramilitary forces and Colombian political figures in Antioquia state, and suggesting a debate on this. Among the persons mentioned as collaborating with the paramilitaries is Santiago Uribe Velez, who is a brother of President Alvaro Uribe Velez. The following anonymous message, which has been circulated widely in Colombia since it appeared yesterday, contains clear threats directed at Senator Petro and the Polo Democratico. The Polo uses the color yellow as its identifying color. The reference to yellow in the message is, therefore, a threat against Polo party members. Note the reference to U.S. support of President Uribe¹s policies as a guarantee for the paramilitaries¹ proposed murder campaign.

Please write to your Congressional Representative and Senators to express your serious concern about these threats, and write to President Bush and Secretary of State Rice to tell them you want the U.S. government to make clear to President Uribe that it expects President Uribe to investigate these threats, prosecute those responsible for them, and provide protection for Senator Petro and other leaders and members of the Polo Democratico. Any future U.S. aid to Colombia should be conditioned upon the Uribe government providing these protections and permitting the revelations by Senator Petro and others to go forward.

ANONYMOUS MESSAGE FROM PARAMILITARIES CIRCULATED IN COLOMBIA ON FEBRUARY 6, 2007
³Communique to all those servile kneeling persons camouflaged as civilians²
³Colombia free of communists, armed political arm of the Ex-AUC²
³Fronts: Capital, Central, Sur, Caribe,Llanos, Nororiente, Nueva Generacion, Aguilas Negras ( Capital, Central, Caribbean, Plains, Northeast, New Generation, Black Eagles)
³We identify ourselves with the security policy of President Alvaro Uribe Velez; we are with him until the final victory over the communists disguised and camouflaged as civilians who continue to serve the insurgency of the FARC. We are one step away from realizing the greatest dream of our president, which is the consolidation of the communitarian state and the new political-administrative division of Colombia. This is the best agreement which we have been able to achieve since the meetings of Ralito. Up to the present we have carried on a campaign of cleaning out all of the social slag who are said to call themselves defenders of human rights, social leaders, labor union leaders, politicized ex-guerrillas, and clearly headed by an insignificant group of poor quality lawyers who say that they are going to bring the president to judgment for his past, as if we were not also aware of the dirty past which all of them together have.

We are undertaking from this moment a frontal war to the death against all those who hide behind their cover of façade, NGO¹s, rebel daily newspapers, tiny offices, houses of ³protection² of false democrats. We will go to their houses, buildings, offices, universities, we are going to haul them out publicly before the media so that the country can see the small class of person who awaits them if they change the course of the policy of security.

From this moment on we are going to apply the death penalty to the traitors of the fatherland, those who spend their time seeking asylum because they are scared t death in their country, shameless sons of bitches who turn their backs on their people, who steal the monies which come from other countries to these NGO¹s to serve the community, foundations camouflaged as benefactors who are nothing more than thieves of the future of our country.

Therefore, it is our reason for this new crusade, which we will carry out hand in hand with the national army and the armed forces of Colombia, to cleanse ourselves of what crap is left in the house.

Our immediate military objective is the execution of the disguised communists who hide themselves in the Polo Democratico, NGO¹s which ³protect² kneeling in a servile way the FARC, and those new revolting bolivarian movements which have begun to transcend our sovereignty and betray the democratically elected government in Colombia. NO MORE WITH YOU CAROUSING (parranda) SONS OF BITCHES.

The only dignified way out which they have is LEAVING THE COUNTRY. We will not permit them to continue with their actions of supposed democracy, since we know well that what they are hiding is the last strategy which is left to the FARC for taking powerŠof course with the petrodollars of Chavez and his communist ideology of crap. THEY CANNOT.

The North American people at the head of their present government know very well that you will not be the future of our country. We can count upon the military and technical support which will guarantee us a sweeping victory over the insurgents and their servile supporters (arrodillados).

Everyone should know that behind each one of those who say they are defenders of human rights, social leaders and poor quality lawyers, camouflaged journalists, and every ex-guerrilla who believes he is untouchable, after (de xada) there will be one of our commandos following his actions day and night, and his ties with the FARC, the ELN, and any other little group which may appear.

We will uncover them before the country and the world, showing the falsity which is hidden behind these ³innocent² little faces.

We will judge them in accord with their actions, massacring them in public squares so that the people will recognize the social justice which these traitors to the country deserve.

We will do away with you through your families, your children and your loved ones who will give their lives thanks to your dirty, cowardly acts, which you do not face up to, and for that reason your families will pay dearly for your error.

As far as the poor lawyers such as those of the collective and other NGO¹s and ex-guerrillas of the Polo who say they are going to judge the president, we warn them that these risky actions will cost them blood.

Now they will see what awaits them, these idle sons of bitches.

Tuesday, February 13ŠA yellow one is in sight!!!!!!!!!

Could it be that they will dare to meet and judge the president.

You now have your time up!

Death to the kneeling supporters of the FARC camouflaged as civilians

Death to false leaders, defenders and poor quality persons

Out of Colombia disguised communists

Total war to cleanse Colombia

Colombia Forever Free!!!!! !!!!!!

——-

COMUNICADO A TODOS LOS ARRODILLADOS SERVILES CAMUFLADOS DE CIVIL

COLOMBIA LIBRE DE COMUNISTAS BRAZO POLITICO ARMADO DE LAS EX-AUC

FRENTES CAPITAL CENTRAL SUR CARIBE LLANOS NORORIENTE NUEVA GENERACION AGUILAS NEGRAS

Nos identificamos con la politica de seguridad del presidente Alvaro Uribe Velez, estamos con el hasta la victoria final sobre los comunistas disfraszdos y los camuflados de civil que siguen sirviendo a la insurgencia de las FARC, estamos a un paso de conseguir el mayor sueño de nuestro presidente que es la consolidación del estado comunitario y la nueva division politicoadministrativa de Colombia, ese es el mejor acuerdo que hemos podido realizar desde los encuentros de ralito, hasta el momento hemos liberado una campaña de limpieza de toda esa escoria social que dicen llamarse defensores de los derechos humanos, lideres sociales, sindicalistas, exquerrilleros politizados, y claro encabezados por un grupo insignificante de abogaduchos de pacotilla que dicen van a llevar al presidente a juicio por su pasado, como si ya no supieramos tambien ese puerco pasado que estos todos en conjunto ocupan.

Libraremos desde este momento una guerra frontal a sangre y fuego contra todos esos que se esconden tras sus guaridas de fachada, ongs, diarios rebeldes, oficinitas, casas de “proteccion” de falsos demócratas, iremos a sus casa, edificios, oficinas, universidades,les vamos a sacar públicamente ante los medios para que el pais vea la clasesita de gentuza que les espera si cambian el rumbo de la politica de seguirad,
Vamos a aplicar desde este momento la pena de muerte a los traidores a la patria, aquellos que la pasan pidiendo asilo por que se cagan de miedo en su pais, sinvergüenzas hijueputas que le dan la espalda a su gente, que se roban los dineros que de otros paises llegan a esas ongs para servir a la comunidad, fundaciones camufladas de benefactores que no son otra cosa mas que ladrones del futuro de nuestra patria.
Por eso es nuestra razon de esta nueva cruzada que haremos de la mano con el ejercito nacional y las fuerzas armadas de Colombia, limpiaremos lo que queda de mierda en la casa,

Nuestro objetivo militar inmediato es la ejecución de los comunistas disfrasados que se esconden en el polo democratico, ongs que “protegen” arrodillados serviles a las FARC, y esos nuevos movimientos revoltosos bolivarianos que han empezado a transcender nuestra soberania y traicionan al gobierno elegido democráticamente en Colombia. NO MAS CON USTEDES PARRANDA DE HIJUESPUTAS

La unica salida digna que tienen es el DESTIERRO , no permitiremos que continuen con sus acciones de supuesta democracia cuando ya bien sabemos que lo que esconden es la ultima estrategia que les queda a las FARC para tomarse el poder ….claro con la ayuda del los petrodólares de chavez y su ideología comunista de la mierda, NO PODRAN

El pueblo norteamericano en cabeza de su gobierno actual saben muy bien que Ustedes no seran el futuro de nuestra patria, contamos con el apoyo militar y tecnico que nos garantizara una victoria contundente sobre los insurgentes y sus serviles arrodillados,

Deben saber todos ustedes que tras de cada uno de aquellos que dicen ser defensores del derecho humano, lideres sociales y abogaduchos de pacotilla, periodistas camuflados, y todo exguerrillero que se crea intocable, tras de xada uno habra un comando de los nuestros siguiendo dia y noche sus acciones, sus nexos con las FARC, el eln, y cualquier otro grupito que aparezca,
Los desnudaremos ante el pais y el mundo, mostrando la falsedad que esconden tras de esas “inocentes “ caritas.
Les juzgaremos conforme a las acciones masacrandoles en plazas publicas para que el pueblo conozca la justicia social que se merecen los traidores a la patria,

Acabaremos con Ustedes por medio de sus familias, sus hijos y seres queridos daran su vida por culpa de sus actos sucios, cobardes que no dan la cara y por eso sus famitas pagaran caro su error.

En cuanto a los abogaduchos esos del colectivo y otra ongs y los exguerrilleros del polo que dicen que van a juzgar al presidente, les advertimos que tales atrevimientos les costaran sangre,

ya veran lo que les espera hijueputas sin oficio.

Martes 13 de Febrero……..Un amarillo esta en la mira!!!!!!!!!

Sera que se atreve a sesionar y enjuiciar al presidente,

Usted ya tiene su tiempo listo!

MUERTE A LOS CAMUFLADOS DE CIVIL ARRODILLADOS A LAS FARC

MUERTE A LIDERES FALSOS DEFENSORES Y PACOTILLAS

FUERA DE COLOMBIA LOS COMUNISTAS DISFRASADOS

SANGRE Y FUEGO PARA LIMPIAR A COLOMBIA

COLOMBIA LIBRE POR SIEMPRE!!!!!!!!!!!

The second phase of Plan Colombia

So, we’ve had seven years of Plan Colombia which was initiated, famously, with 1.3 billion from the US and an additional 4-5 billion of Colombians’ money. The money paid for helicopters, mainly, and other military hardware and support to the Colombian army to fight ‘drugs’ – mainly to provide military support for aerial fumigation. It’s been 7 years with no effect on drug supply or demand, though there have been ‘successes’ in other realms – to which I’ll return. But first, the news – that after 7 years of Plan Colombia, they’re entering a second phase, according to El Tiempo, Colombia’s national newspaper (article below). Its features:

-It is around $44 billion pesos to start, which is about $23 million USD
-The “international community” will provide 30%
-It is a 6-year plan, going to 2013
-Over the course of the plan, some $3.6 billion USD will come from the US, $9 billion USD from Europe and Asia
-86% of the plan will go to ‘development’, 14% to military expenditure against ‘drugs’.

The first plan had the following features.

-Between 2000-2006, the US put $4.7 billion USD into Plan Colombia, the Europeans about $1 billion, and Colombia $7.5 billion.
-57% of this went to ‘fighting drugs’, 43% to ‘social investment’

In the very same edition of El Tiempo, we get a sense of the success of Plan Colombia. I have been a bit derilect in covering this here, but the shining jewel in the crown of Plan Colombia is the government’s negotiation with the paramilitaries, by which these mass murderers, who were always supported and trained and armed by the army and the US, confess their crimes, ‘reintegrate’ into society, and ‘put down their weapons’. The major media event in this is paramilitary commander Salvatore Mancuso’s ongoing confessions of his massacres, torture, and assassinations. This process, in which the government negotiates with itself and gives itself some benefits, has given rise to a movement of victims, families of victims of paramilitary massacre who have demanded truth and justice and who have entered the judicial process to have their voices heard.

One such courageous witness was Yolanda Izquierdo, who was murdered yesterday by a couple of gunmen on motorcycles. Her husband is dying. She had been threatened and had announced the threats in El Tiempo. Others: Freddy Abel Espitia, president of the Committee of the Displaced of Cotorra, killed on December 28.

The same article on Izquierdo’s murder provides a summary of some of the statistics from the Colombian Commission of Jurists, a human rights group, for the past 4 years.

20,102 killed
11,292 killed outside of combat
75.1% of killed outside of combat attributed to the state
397 per year, on average, killed by the guerrillas
1060 per year, on average, killed by the paramilitaries
1741 people killed in massacres
823 people tortured
6192 people arbitrarily detained

More than anything, this is a (partial) balance sheet of Plan Colombia itself, and one of the measures of its success. A full balance sheet would include the territories and resources that changed hands in the ‘agrarian counter-reform’ by which the paramilitaries displaced 4 million people from their land by way of these killings and massacres in order to hand the territory over for megaprojects. It would also include 3 more years of this. And changes to the constitution, the mining code, the labor law. The destruction of the labor movement and the social organizations. Someone is certainly profiting from all this, and wants to ensure that it continues, all the way to 2013.

Febrero 1 de 2007

Asesinan a mujer que asistió como representante de las víctimas a declaración de Salvatore Mancuso
Eran cerca de las 2 de la tarde cuando Yolanda y su esposo fueron abordados en la puerta de su casa por los dos sicarios.

Desde su asistencia a la primera versión libre del ex jefe paramilitar, en diciembre, comenzaron a llamarla para que se quitara del camino. Ayer, con seis tiros, dos sicarios sellaron las amenazas.

Yolanda Izquierdo acababa de salir a la puerta de su casa del barrio Rancho Grande de Montería, un humilde sector de la margen izquierda del río Sinú, para recibir a su esposo Francisco Torreglosa.

Dos hombres en motocicleta se les acercaron, cruzaron varias palabras con ellos y luego el parrillero disparó.

La campesina, que con el agricultor Manuel Argel encabezó la fila de víctimas de los paramilitares en las pasadas audiencias del ex jefe de las autodefensas Salvatore Mancuso, quedó tendida en el piso con seis tiros en el cuerpo. Su esposo, malherido, sigue en una clínica de Montería.

Corrieron a socorrerlo los vecinos, que desde agosto del año pasado vieron a Yolanda ir y venir en la búsqueda de certificados, mapas y escrituras que documentaban que ella y al menos otras 700 personas habían sido obligadas por los ‘paras’ a vender las parcelas que en 1990 les entregó la Fundación para la Paz de Córdoba (Funpazcor). Esta fue creada por los hermanos Castaño Gil y a través de ella Fidel, el fundador de las Autodefensas Campesinas de Córdoba y Urabá (Accu), entregó 10.000 hectáreas a 2.500 campesinos cuando se desmovilizó, en el 90, en respuesta al desarme del Epl, uno de los grupos que combatió.

Yolanda y Manuel se habían convertido en los voceros de los campesinos de esas tierras arrebatadas, vendidas o abandonadas a la fuerza desde el 2000, cuando comenzaron la presiones.

Yolanda denunció las amenazas en su contra a EL TIEMPO en la tercera semana de enero: “Cuando nos devolvimos para Córdoba, el 22 de diciembre, nos informaron que había una orden para matar a la mujer que coordinaba a las víctimas de Funpazcor, o sea a mí. Quieren que dejemos las cosas así”.

Personas cercanas al trabajo de los desplazados dicen que el crimen fue cometido por hacendados que están explotando las tierras que reclaman los campesinos.

La última advertencia para que Yolanda se quitara del camino fue el pasado jueves. “La llamó una mujer que dijo: Yolanda y Manuel, piérdanse que los van a matar”, le contó a este diario el abogado Mauricio Caballero, que representa a 863 víctimas de las Auc.

El jueves, el viernes, el lunes y ayer martes Yolanda fue a la Fiscalía a pedir protección. Los cuatro días, denuncia Caballero, le dijeron que debía esperar ocho días para que la solicitud hiciera trámite. “Yolanda era la que los alentaba a todos para que reclamaran sus tierras. Si no se hace nada, el próximo muerto va a ser Manuel”, afirma el abogado. El ataque contra la campesina, que a duras penas cargaba en el bolsillo lo del bus, es el tercero contra víctimas de las Auc en 15 días. Como si la idea fuera acabar con quienes están pidiendo justicia y reparación.

Los otros ataques

1. El domingo 28, desconocidos mataron a Freddy Abel Espitia, presidente del Comité de Desplazados de Cotorra (Córdoba).

2. El 20 de enero, le prendieron fuego a la sede de la Liga de Mujeres Desplazadas de Turbaco (Bolívar).

Buscó techo a muchos

Desde su desplazamiento, Yolanda Izquierdo lideró en Montería la Organización Popular de Vivienda (OPV), que dio techo a dos mil familias desplazadas.

Ella presentó el proyecto entre 1997 y 1998 y fue respaldado por la Alcaldía de la capital cordobesa.

“Nos dijeron que había una orden de matar a la mujer que coordinaba a las víctimas de Funpazcord, o sea a mí”.

Datos de 4 años

La Comisión Colombiana de Juristas presentó un informe sobre la situación de derechos humanos y del Derecho Internacional Humanitario, correspondiente al lapso junio de 2002 y julio de 2006. Algunos datos son:

Muertos: 20.102 personas murieron durante ese tiempo, incluyendo las muertes en combate.

Asesinatos: 11.292 personas fueron asesinadas o desaparecidas fuera de combate.

Estado: El 75,1 por ciento de las muertes fuera de combate se le atribuyeron al Estado.

Guerrilla: En promedio asesinó a 397 personas por año.

‘Paras’: En promedio asesinaron o desaparecieron a 1.060 personas cada año.

Masacres: 1.741 personas fueron muertas en masacres

Tortura: 823 personas fueron víctimas de este delito.

Detenciones: 6.192 colombianos fueron detenidos arbitrariamente durante este lapso.

Colombia is the model for Afghanistan

An AP article sent to me by Anthony Fenton describes how a US General (Pace) says that Colombia’s drug war is the model for the Afghanistan drug war.

I’m reproducing it below. The article contains critique from the decent and intelligent Adam Isacson, who notes that Colombia’s drug war is a disaster by any sane or decent measure.

But of course the stated goals of drug wars have little to do with the actual goals, as I’ve noted in my own comparison between Afghanistan and Colombia months ago.

In particular, the aspects of the model that aren’t discussed include:

-Getting the resources of the country in the hands of friends and allies

-Funding and arming forces to control territories and populations; handing those forces political and military power in exchange

-Establishing permanent bases and military control in a country as a foothold into an entire region; establishing military forces close to perceieved ‘threats’

These are the military logic of these campaigns, for which drugs are just a useful pretext…

See the article below.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press
All Rights Reserved
Associated Press Worldstream

January 20, 2007 Saturday 12:54 AM GMT

SECTION: INTERNATIONAL NEWS

LENGTH: 593 words

HEADLINE: U.S. military chief sees anti-drug Plan Colombia a model for Afghanistan

BYLINE: By JOSHUA GOODMAN, Associated Press Writer

DATELINE: BOGOTA Colombia

BODY:

The United States’ top military official said Friday that American-backed anti-drug and counterinsurgent operations in Colombia the world’s largest producer of cocaine should serve as a “model” for the Afghan government.

Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Colombia’s campaign to “rid certain areas of terrorists” followed by relief and jobs programs for the poor was a “good model for (Afghan) President Hamid Karzai to consider as he looks at how to reduce the amount of drug trafficking in his country.”

Afghanistan has been plagued by skyrocketing heroin production. But critics say it would be a mistake for the country to duplicate Colombia’s model, which they say has been ineffective despite costing American taxpayers more than US$4 billion (euro3 billion) since 2000.

Pace’s comments, at the end of a two-day visit here, were made in the presence of William Wood, who on Thursday was nominated by the White House to become its next ambassador in Afghanistan.

Wood has served as U.S. ambassador to Bogota since 2003.

Pace also thanked the government of President Alvaro Uribe Washington’s staunchest ally in Latin America for the way “he has reached out to Karzai and his government to provide experience and teams of experts” in combatting drugs.

Colombia, at the urging of the United States, has sent several missions of police and anti-drug experts to train Afghan police and advise Kabul. Opium production in Afghanistan last year rose 49 percent enough to make about 670 tons (607 metric tons) of heroin.

Many Afghan oppose spraying herbicides to kill fields of poppies, which are used to make heroin. The method is seen as likely to anger farmers and scare local residents.

Afghanistan is the source of 90 percent of the world’s opium production, although Colombia is the main supplier of heroin to the United States.

In Colombia the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia have financed their four-decade old leftist insurgency through the drug trade, while in Afghanistan rising poppy production is blamed for fueling an increase in Taliban-led attacks against U.S. troops.

Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos said Colombia “was more than willing to continue and increase” counter-narcotic cooperation with U.S., British and Afghan officials.

Since 2000, the U.S. government has provided Colombia with more than US$700 million (euro540 million) in annual military aid to chemically eradicate fields of coca the base ingredient of cocaine and train troops fighting the FARC. Another US$125 million (euro96 million) are devoted to humanitarian relief and programs to encourage poor farmers to switch to growing legal crops.

Colombia is the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid outside the Middle East.

But despite record aerial eradication campaigns a cornerstone of the U.S.-backed anti-drug policy critics say the costly Plan Colombia has fallen well short of its goal to halve the country’s production of coca.

The latest U.S. government survey found 26 percent more land 144,000 hectares (355,000 acres) in 2005 dedicated to the plant than the previous year’s survey.

“It would be a disaster for Afghanistan if they were to copy the character and model of Plan Colombia,” Adam Isacson, an analyst at the Washington-based Center for International Policy, told The Associated Press.

“If Afghanistan began fumigating across its country, Colombia has shown us that after five or six years later you’ll have just as much drug crop being grown and a lot more angry people who don’t trust their government and continue to be poor,” he said.