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RIGHTS-COLOMBIA: Extrajudicial Killings Under Scrutiny

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 30, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Constanza Vieira

BOGOTA, Oct 30 (IPS) – The dismissal of 20 officers and seven noncommissioned officers for extrajudicial executions of civilians presented as battlefield casualties ”is a triumph for human rights organisations and for Colombian society as a whole,” said Reynaldo Villalba of the José Alvear Restrepo Lawyers Collective.

Villalba urged the Attorney General’s Office to carry out an in-depth investigation, ”not only of the fired officers but especially of those who were not fired, who remain hidden and are responsible for these policies.”

The three generals, 11 colonels, four majors, one captain, one lieutenant, six sergeants and one corporal who were sacked were posted in the northern departments (provinces) of Santander, Norte de Santander, Arauca and Antioquia.

The second and seventh army divisions both lost their commanders, Generals
José Joaquín Cortés (Santander, Norte de Santander and Arauca) and Roberto Pico (Antioquia).

The third general who was cashiered is Paulino Coronado, commander of the 30th Brigade. The scandal was triggered by the discovery of bodies of missing men in the remote district of Ocaña in Norte de Santander, which is in his jurisdiction.
… Continue Reading

Popularity: 100% [?]

Q&A: ”We Are not Subversives, and We Demand Respect”

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, October 25, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Judith Henríquez Acuña interviews indigenous leader DANIEL PIÑACUÉ

VILLA RICA, Colombia, Oct 24 (IPS) – Colombian President Álvaro Uribe admitted that the security forces opened fire on indigenous protesters in the southwestern province of Cauca, but denies that they were responsible for the deaths of three demonstrators, said Daniel Piñacué, a leader of the Nasa community.

Piñacué, head of the governing council of Calderas, an indigenous reservation in the mountains of Cauca, and a prominent member of the powerful Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca (CRIC), was interviewed by IPS in the small town of Villa Rica.

The CRIC organised the ”minga” (a traditional indigenous meeting for the collective good), the name given to the march that set out from the La María Indian reservation, declared a ”territory of peace and co-existence” in the midst of Colombia’s civil war.

The 35,000 indigenous marchers, who belong to a number of different ethnic groups and come from 20 of Colombia’s 32 provinces (known as departments), expect to reach the city of Cali, the capital of the southwestern province of Valle del Cauca, on Saturday.

Piñacué, one of the leading spokespersons for the indigenous protest, told the media that the security forces had used live ammunition against the demonstrators, before the U.S. cable news network CNN broadcast a video this week taped by participants in the march that showed a uniformed man wearing a mask shooting in the direction of the protesters.

On Wednesday, Uribe acknowledged that the police had fired at the demonstrators.

But previously, the rightwing president had publicly called for Piñacué’s arrest.

On Thursday, Uribe gave in to the indigenous demonstrators’ demands for talks, and personally called Piñacué’s cell-phone to announce that he would meet with the leaders of the march on Sunday in Cali.

The protesters are demanding fulfillment of agreements signed with various governments since 1971. ”We want the president to set deadlines and timeframes for compliance with these commitments, and we want national and international observers to be present,” Piñacué told IPS late Thursday in Villa Rica, a small town along the Pan-American highway on the way from the La María reservation to Cali.

IPS: Uribe admitted that firearms were used against the protest. What is the indigenous movement’s view?

DANIEL PIÑACUÉ: The president finally recognised — because of a video, not because he believed it when we publicly told him — that the security forces have used violence against the peaceful indigenous march.

What he should also acknowledge is that three Indians were killed and more than 100 injured in the clashes with the army in La María. The wounded are being treated in hospitals in the towns of Popayán and Santander.

IPS: Uribe also agreed to talks. What will you demand in the dialogue?

DP: In first place, since we have been accused of being criminals and of inciting violence, we want our names cleared. We also don’t want to be treated as second-class citizens, and we want respect for our languages and our ancestral customs.

In addition, we are asking for an expansion of our reservations, legal title to our lands, and enough land to keep our cultures alive, work them, and obtain the products needed for the survival of our communities, in order to keep indigenous people from having to move to the cities, which is leading to the gradual loss of our cultural identity.

We are asking not to be violently pushed off our lands — a phenomenon that is facilitated by the Colombian government so that transnational companies can exploit our land, leaving us without water, and without minerals like iron, nickel and gold.

Furthermore, we are seeking the repeal of a number of laws that were passed without consulting us (as required by the constitution) by the illegitimate Congress elected by the narco-paramilitaries, and which hurt our communities: the laws on forestry, water and land. (The far-right paramilitaries, many of whose leaders have been extradited to the United States on drug trafficking charges, have publicly claimed that they control at least 35 percent of the members of Congress.)

IPS: Have the guerrillas infiltrated the indigenous march?

DP: Whenever a protest or march is held, the political leaders in this country always tell the media that the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) guerrillas are behind it, and that the subversives are manipulating and using the Indians or peasant farmers who are demonstrating for a just cause.

For us that’s an old story. But we have to make it clear to public opinion that we, who are standing up to demand respect for our rights and for the dignity and physical, cultural and political integrity of every one of our indigenous brothers and sisters, as well as the fulfillment of a number of agreements that have been ignored, are the only ‘subversives’ here.

Claiming the guerrillas have infiltrated the demonstration is false, and irresponsibly puts our lives at risk.

IPS: What should the international community know about what Colombia’s indigenous movement is asking for?

DP: They should know what things are really like. That we live in a battleground created by the armed sectors that for years have displaced us from the best lands, and forced us farther and farther up into the mountains.

They should know we are peaceful, hard-working people who are justly demanding our right to our land and the freedom and the right to demand humane, decent conditions to live in peace.

Popularity: 13% [?]

COLOMBIA: Uribe Agrees to Talks with Indigenous Protesters

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Thursday, October 23, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Constanza Vieira*

BOGOTA, Oct 23 (IPS) – ”The police did fire” on indigenous protesters, said Colombian President Álvaro Uribe, who yielded to pressure to meet next Sunday with the leaders of a two-week-long demonstration by native groups.

On Wednesday night, the rightwing president acknowledged an incident that was videotaped by protesters in the La María indigenous reservation in the southwestern province of Cauca and broadcast by the U.S. cable news network CNN. The video shows a masked, uniformed police officer shooting in the direction of the demonstrators.

But with respect to the three indigenous people killed since the protests began on Oct. 12 — one on Oct. 14 and two on Oct. 21 — Uribe maintained that they weren’t shot by the security forces, but were killed by explosives used by ”the terrorists,” as he refers to the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas, who he accuses of infiltrating the peaceful demonstration.

National police chief General Óscar Naranjo, meanwhile, said that ”up to 700 police” have been deployed against the protesters, although last week he said the police numbered 1,000.
… Continue Reading

Popularity: 12% [?]

COLOMBIA: Oil Palms, Right Abuses Hand in Hand in Northwest

September 6, 2008 Colombia, Human Rights, Report No Comments

Global Geopolitics – Global News Blog – Global Politics Online – IPS
Saturday, September 06, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Constanza Vieira

BOGOTA, Sep 5 (IPS) – As of this week, there is one less human rights defender in the northwestern Colombian region of Bajo Atrato. Jimmy Jansasoy of the Inter-Church Justice and Peace Commission was forced to flee the area, where oil palm plantations have encroached on the collectively-owned jungle territories of traditional black communities.

On Aug. 29, Jansasoy gave a workshop on ”biodiversity zones” in a village on the Curbaradó river, which runs into the Atrato river.

In that region, the Colombian Inter-Church Justice and Peace Commission and international human rights groups like the Canada-based Project Accompaniment and Solidarity Colombia (PASC) and the UK-based Peace Brigades International (PBI) provide support to ”peace communities” that have come under attack from far-right paramilitary groups.

As a result of e-mail threats received by the groups since Aug. 24, two other members of the Inter-Church Justice and Peace Commission had already fled the area.

On the afternoon of Wednesday Sep. 3, in the Bajo Atrato town of Chigorodó in the northwestern province of Antioquia, four armed men in civilian dress forced Jansasoy at gunpoint to get into their double-cabin pickup truck with tinted windows, where they questioned him for over an hour.

Receiving orders by cell-phone, one of the men, wearing dark glasses, reported to his superiors that ”he only has a Bible, a notebook and his personal effects,” as the men searched Jansasoy’s knapsack.

They told Jansasoy to give them ”the full names” of all of those who provide support to the communities, ”as well as their addresses and those of their families.”

When Jansasoy said he did not have that information, they warned him: ”We’ll give you until Sunday.”

When they released him, they ordered him to go to the ”Andalucía Caño Claro” Humanitarian Zone and write down the names and addresses of the families of human rights defenders working with the community. They also told him not to say anything about his brief detention.

”Because of this act of illegal detention, intimidation, psychological pressure and threat, Jansasoy was forced to leave the region,” says a communiqué issued by the Inter-Church Justice and Peace Commission.

There are no guarantees ”for the defence and promotion of human rights in the Bajo Atrato area,” it adds.

PEACE COMMUNITIES

The ”humanitarian zones” were created by local peasant families in response to the atrocities and human rights abuses committed by the paramilitary militias, which peaked in the 1990s.

The communities emerged in the northern part of the province of Antioquia and the neighbouring province of Chocó as a result of the killings and forced displacement of peasant farmers that occurred simultaneously with the military’s Operation Genesis, launched in the area in 1997 by General Rito Alejo del Río, commander at the time of the army’s 17th Brigade.

The general, now retired, was arrested Thursday on charges of working with the paramilitaries during Operation Genesis, against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas, which got underway while current President Álvaro Uribe was governor of Antioquia (1995-1997).

The humanitarian zones were set up as communities opposed to the war, which defend the distinction between civilians and combatants, as established by international humanitarian law.

The victims of forced displacement who have returned to the area to establish these peace communities have declared them off-limits to the members of any armed groups. But they are not neutral, because they consider themselves victims of the violence practiced by the military and their paramilitary allies.

Peasant farmers in the humanitarian zones may be practically illiterate, but they associate the terror and rights abuses that they have suffered with the imposition of a development model based on agribusiness and privately owned monoculture initiatives like the African palm plantations, the oil of which is used to produce biodiesel.

The humanitarian zones have adopted a model of production that involves traditional and innovative small farming techniques. In the Curbaradó river basin, with the support of the Inter-Church Justice and Peace Commission, the communities have been creating ”natural reserves and biodiversity zones” since 2006, where subsistence farming is practiced in harmony with the surrounding Chocó rainforest, one of the most biodiverse areas in the world.

The same day that Jansasoy was held at gunpoint, four experts from Ecuador, Chile, Uruguay and Mexico gave conferences on biodiversity, sovereignty and food security in a seminar at the National University of Colombia in Bogota.

They provided a detailed map of a global model arising in recent years, in which each country specialises in one product: ”Ecuador in bananas, Colombia in flowers, Argentina in soy,” as stated by Elizabeth Bravo, an activist with the Ecuadorean environmental group Acción Ecológica.

Former food exporting countries have become net importers of food products, while transnational corporations that produce fertilisers, indispensable for monoculture farming, reap the benefits.

Fossil fuels are no longer inexhaustible in an economic system addicted to energy, and attempts are being made to replace them with biofuels partly obtained from food crops like corn. Land, and what is grown on it, have become strategic questions, said the experts.

Meanwhile, the prices of both fertilisers and food continue to climb. Bravo pointed out, for example, that in the last year, the price of rice has gone up 90 percent, wheat 130 percent and corn 53 percent.

According to a confidential internal World Bank report that was leaked to the press in April, biofuels have driven global food prices up by 75 percent, noted Silvia Ribeiro, a Uruguayan expert with the Action Group on Erosion, Technology and Concentration (ETC Group), an international organisation dedicated to the conservation and sustainable advancement of cultural and ecological diversity and human rights.

Since 1950, statistics have shown that agribusiness and monoculture based on technologies that pose a risk to the environment and to health do not produce more food, said Ribeiro. The solution, she said, is not to continue with the same old model, but to put food production ”in the hands of the people themselves, the world’s small farmers.”

The ”Andalucía Caño Claro” Humanitarian Zone in the Curbaradó river basin, 45 km southwest of the town of Chigorodó, is surrounded by oil palm plantations guarded by numerous police and army control posts.

Since the demobilisation of the paramilitary United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC) as a result of negotiations with the rightwing Uribe administration, these groups no longer exist, according to the government.

But they continue to swarm the region, under a new name: ”Águilas Negras” (Black Eagles).

Behind their threats and operations ”are hidden the business interests that benefit from paramilitarism,” says the Inter-Church Justice and Peace Commission statement.

But in this part of Colombia in particular, the paramilitaries themselves ”are businessmen and launderers of the assets arising from drug trafficking, who conceal their criminal activity under the guise of progress in the oil palm agribusiness, extensive livestock raising and intensive deforestation,” the communiqué adds.

In the 1990s, the paramilitaries forced their way into the Jiguamiandó, Curbaradó and Domingodó river basins, pushing out the local rural communities, with the argument that they were eradicating the leftist guerrillas, who had been present in the area since the 1980s.

But ”there are signs that these expulsions were not so much the result of an intention to force out the guerrillas, but to seize lands that belong to the local communities,” Attorney General Mario Iguarán said in a December 2007 interview with the Bogota daily El Tiempo.

The attorney general’s office has taken the testimony of more than 100 people, carried out judicial inspections of oil palm plantations and factories, as well as banks and land registry offices, and decided to summon for questioning 26 oil palm growers and ranchers in connection with charges of forced displacement, conspiracy to commit crimes and illegal land seizures.

However, the attorney general’s office has not yet reached any decisions, and the Inter-Church Justice and Peace Commission complains that the investigations have been neither effective nor prompt nor timely.

Nor is there any information on concrete government measures to ”promote the restitution of collectively-owned land wrongfully occupied by business interests that benefit from paramilitarism,” says the Commission’s statement.

The proposal that the Commission set forth to the government on Thursday, ”to develop an integral preventive strategy involving the environmental authorities in order to avoid the expansion of oil palm cultivation, ranching and intensive deforestation” is now awaiting a response.

Popularity: 10% [?]

RIGHTS: Betancourt Wants Political Niche for Guerrillas

Global Geopolitics – Global News Blog – Global Politics Online – IPS
Friday, September 05, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Sabina Zaccaro

ROME, Sep 5 (IPS) – Resolution of the conflict in Colombia can only come through ”dialogue and openness,” says Ingrid Betancourt, the former presidential candidate held hostage by leftist guerrillas for more than six years before being rescued by the Colombian military in July.

Opening a ”political niche” to guerrillas from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), where they can act ”in a scheme of political legitimacy” could help progress in achieving peace, she says.

Betancourt’s four-day visit to Italy this week was highlighted by a meeting with Pope Benedict XVI, something she had ”been dreaming throughout all the period of captivity.”

She had declared immediately after her release that she wanted to meet the Pope to thank him for his prayers and for his public appeals for her release.

Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi told Vatican Radio that the meeting was ”very emotional.” Her years as a prisoner were ”a time of great spiritual experience, of prayer, and so she really wanted to tell the Holy Father about the importance faith played in sustaining her during that very difficult period,” Father Lombardi said.

Betancourt said she is also thankful to all of Italy for support through the period of captivity.

But she used her visit mainly to reiterate a call for dialogue between government and guerrilla forces, which she said are in a kind of ”autistic attitude, they are only able to listen to themselves.”

Addressing her kidnappers directly, she said: ”After almost seven years, I can say I know you, I know your organisation, your ideas, your objectives.” The world, she said, is inviting them to open their hearts ”to something more than political and military calculations,” and to ”make room for peace in your minds.”

And peace can come only ”through the way of democracy, mutual respect and law,” she said. She asked the Colombian government to recognise the political role of the FARC, ”knowing that we are different, and have different ideas.”

Ingrid Betancourt spoke also about her political and personal plans. ”The truth is that after seven years as a victim of tyranny and war, my life’s perspective has changed,” she told reporters, her eyes lowered most of the time, and in a voice often breaking with emotion.

”Things that used to be important no longer are; at this moment I only feel the need to speak for those who can’t, first of all for those still in the hands of the FARC, people I know very well, and who are suffering.”

She said her priority is to work for the liberation of other hostages in Colombia and around the world. ”I no longer have ambitions for a political career in Colombia. Perhaps in the future I will think about it, but I don’t believe my place is in the political arena at this moment.”

Referring to reports of her joining the Paris-based United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), she said ”it would be a great honour for me to work for UNESCO, but there are people who are more qualified than I am.”

Her priority, she said, is ”to build up a group of people that can help me to achieve my mission: to alleviate the pain of those who are still prisoner, to make people aware.”

Her own story shows, she added, that talking about the victims of terror can save lives. ”During my imprisonment, globalisation to me meant knowing that people in the whole world were asking for my release.”

Nicola Zingaretti, president of the Rome province, said Italy is supporting her candidature for the Nobel Peace Price. ”Because Ingrid has won her battle in the name of democracy and freedom, and gives the world a message of hope,” Zingaretti told IPS. ”With her liberation, the cause of peace and justice has won.”

The municipality of Rome conferred honorary citizenship to Betancourt in 2003. Under former mayor Walter Veltroni, the city led many public initiatives for her release.

A day before Betancourt’s arrival in Italy, the daily La Repubblica reported that a Colombian government dossier would accuse Italy’s Refounded Communist Party (Rifondazione Comunista) of links with the FARC, included fundraising for it.

The revelation allegedly emerged from e-mails on a laptop belonging to FARC commander Raul Reyes, who was killed in March in a Colombian military raid.

Ramon Mantovani, in charge of the party’s foreign affairs section, said the party’s contacts with FARC are well known. ”The position of my party is that Colombia needs peace talks, and all the contacts between us and FARC are addressed to give our contribution to rebuilding a peace process in Colombia,” he told IPS.

Mantovani said his party will keep campaigning for peace in Colombia, and seek the ”politically negotiated resolution of an armed conflict that has been staining Colombia with blood for too many years.”

Popularity: 11% [?]

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US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: WAITING FOR OBL

October 28, 2008

US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: WAITING FOR OBL

INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR—PAPER NO 461
Global Geopolitics Net Sites – Global Intel Net
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Copyright © B. Raman – South Asia Analysis Group
www.southasiaanalysis.org
B.RAMAN
It is just one week before the US Presidential elections. We all know all that we want to know about the two candidates Senators John McCain of the Republican Party and Senator Barrack [...]

EU courts Asia, banks on China

October 27, 2008

EU courts Asia, banks on China

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Monday, October 27, 2008
© Copyright 2008 Susenjit Guha. All rights reserved.
By Susenjit Guha
European Commission President Jose Barroso, who is also a former prime minister of Portugal, urged China, India and Japan to “be on board” at the Asia-Europe Meeting in Beijing over the weekend. “It’s very simple: we sink together or we [...]

LOWS IN INDIA-SRI LANKA RELATIONS – OPPORTUNITY FOR TURN AROUND

October 26, 2008

LOWS IN INDIA-SRI LANKA RELATIONS – OPPORTUNITY FOR TURN AROUND

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Sunday, October 26, 2008
© Copyright 2008 Malladi Rama Rao. All rights reserved.
By Malladi Rama Rao
Many commentators see in the present lows in the India-Sri Lanka relations a repeat of history – what had happened twenty one year ago, June 1987 to be precise, when President J R Jayewardene was in the midst [...]

China Threatens neighbors in South China Sea

October 24, 2008

China Threatens neighbors in South China Sea

Global Geopolitics Net Sites
Friday, October 24, 2008
© Copyright 2008 James Crickton. All rights reserved.
By James Crickton*
London: With the Olympics behind now, China has begun flexing its muscles to brow beat its neighbors to fall in line or face the music. Serious concerns have been expressed, especially by Vietnam, over the recent intense activities of the [...]

CHINESE ECONOMY MONITOR—NOTE 2

October 24, 2008

CHINESE ECONOMY MONITOR—NOTE 2

Global Geopolitics Net Sites – Global Politics Online
Friday, October 24, 2008
Copyright © B. Raman – Chennai Center for China Studies
www.c3sindia.org
B.RAMAN
( What will be the impact of the global financial and economic melt-down on the Chinese economy? This question should be of interest to the
other countries of the South and the South-East Asian region. If the [...]

News

HEALTH: Haj Pilgrims Get Polio Drops in Int’l Eradication Plan

November 13, 2008

Global Politics Online / IPS
Zofeen Ebrahim
KARACHI, Nov 13 (IPS) – As the first batches of Haj pilgrims from Pakistan arrived at Saudi Arabia’s Jeddah airport for the current pilgrimage season they were, regardless of age, administered oral polio vaccine (OPV).
Saudi Arabia, a polio-free country, is taking every precaution to prevent transmission of the [...]

SRI LANKA: Tamil Rebels Defy Siege With Aerial Bombings

October 29, 2008

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.
IPS Correspondents
COLOMBO, Oct 29 (IPS) – Aerial bombings carried out on the capital and a northern military base, late Tuesday night, have signalled that the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) remains a fighting force — despite [...]

ECONOMY: EU Involvement in DRC Mining Project Draws Protest

October 28, 2008

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.
Michael Deibert
LONDON, Oct 28 (IPS) – The involvement of the European Union in a mining project in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has drawn a chorus of protest from local and international human rights advocates. They [...]

US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: WAITING FOR OBL

October 28, 2008

INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM MONITOR—PAPER NO 461
Global Geopolitics Net Sites – Global Intel Net
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Copyright © B. Raman – South Asia Analysis Group
www.southasiaanalysis.org
B.RAMAN
It is just one week before the US Presidential elections. We all know all that we want to know about the two candidates Senators John McCain of the Republican Party and Senator Barrack [...]

RIGHTS-SRI LANKA: Court Steps in as Governance Falters

October 27, 2008

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, October 27, 2008
All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.
Feizal Samath
COLOMBO, Oct 27 (IPS) – Finding themselves up against corrupt politicians and indifferent governance Sri Lankans are increasingly turning to the country’s Supreme Court for relief, even for solutions to everyday issues.
A landmark judgment earlier this [...]

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