As
the US Congress considers whether to ratify a free trade
agreement with Colombia put forward by the Obama Administration,
Colombian and other activists based in the US have put out
an urgent call for such ratification to be refused.
NGOs
are urging members of Congress to oppose ratification of
the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement (FTA), saying that
the agreement fails to recognize the serious human rights
concerns around labor and the treatment of Colombia's Afro-Colombian
and indigenous populations.
The
US Congress should most definitely refuse to ratify this
agreement with the Colombian government. The US government
admits itself that there are serious human rights problems
in Colombia � including the fact that workers receive death
threats on a daily basis and many are killed by armed groups,
with no one held accountable. Furthermore, under Colombia's
draconian labor laws, only about 1 percent of Colombian
workers are covered by a labor agreement.
The
FTA was initially signed under President Bush and then-Colombian
President Uribe on November 26, 2006, during a scandal that
implicated more than a third of Colombia�s Congress with
directly supporting paramilitary groups responsible for
crimes against humanity, including violently displacing
people in order to acquire valuable land.
The
FTA was never ratified by U.S. Congress due to human rights
concerns, but following ongoing Colombian lobbying to have
the pact approved, the Obama Administration finally submitted
it to Congress for final approval.
If
this pact is ratified by the US Congress, it will have devastating
consequences for Colombian workers and for Afro-descendent
communities in Colombia.� It will also undermine the Obama
Administration�s claim to be concerned about human rights
in the region.
Additional
Facts:
-
Colombia has the largest internally displaced population
in the world. The ongoing internal armed conflict in Colombia
has caused more than five million Colombians to abandon
about 6.6 million hectares of land since 1980.
-
Colombia is the most dangerous country in the world for
trade unionists, with 51 unionists murdered in 2010 alone.
Only 6 percent of investigations into the cases of murdered
unionists since 1986 have reached a conviction - a 94 percent
impunity rate for the perpetrators.
-
If the US-Colombia FTA is ratified by the US Congress, nearly
400,000 small farmers
would lose between 48 and 70 percent of their income. The
FTA could also contradict U.S. counter-narcotics efforts
in the country by pushing small farmers to cultivate coca,
a far more lucrative crop, in order to survive. This would
undermine development programs the US has invested in for
more than a decade.
-
On September 15, 2010, the US State Department announced
that they had certified that Colombia was meeting the human
rights conditions required for receipt of military aid in
the face of abundant evidence that human rights violations
by security forces were continuing with impunity.
-
The Colombian government has dramatically failed to meet
its obligations to protect human rights defenders. In the
past six months, threats against Afro-Colombian and other
community groups have increased, and the few investigations
into these threats have yielded no results.
Charo
Mina Rojas is available for print and broadcast interviews.
Please
contact: [email protected] or
US mobile tel: 434-760-0663.
Links
for addition reading:
A
recent statement issued by the Black Communities' Process
in Colombia (PCN) on the Labor Action Plan agreed between
Obama and Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos:
http://www.afrocolombians.com/pdfs/PCNPressRelease-FTA-English4-12.pdf
From
AfroColombians.com: Facts regarding the impact of FTA on
small farmers, Afro-Colombian territorial rights and jobs
in the US:
http://www.afrocolombians.com/pdfs/ColombiaFTAFactsheet.pdf
From
the FogCityJournal.com: Congress Should Reject US-Colombia
Free Trade Agreement
http://www.fogcityjournal.com/wordpress/2876/congress-should-reject-us-colombia-free-trade-agreement/
From
OxfamAmerica.com: US-Colombia Free Trade Agreement Bad Deal
for Development and National Security
http://www.oxfamamerica.org/press/pressreleases/us-colombia-free-trade-agreement-bad-deal-for-development-and-national-security/?searchterm=None
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator, Charo Mina Rojas is the National Coordinator of Advocacy and
Outreach of the Black Communities� Process (Proceso de Comunidades
Negras-PCN), and member of the Afro-Colombia Solidarity
Network (ACSN), based in the US. Ms. Rojas worked for more
than 15 years with organizations in Colombia on education
and sustainable development projects for Afro-descendant
communities. In 1995, she worked in Colombia's Ministry
of Education as an adviser on the implementation
of educational projects for Afro-Colombian communities.
|