Take Action to Stop the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement (FTA): The FTA is a Threat to Afro-Colombian Rights. Afro-Colombian grassroots organizations are opposed to the FTA.
As President Bush rushes to pressure the U.S. congress for a favorable vote on the U.S.-Colombia FTA, under the guise of national security, we need you to take action and let your representative know that approving the FTA will sentence Indigenous and Afro-Colombians communities to a live of poverty and exclusion.
While the Bush administration tries to mislead Congress and public
opinion on Colombia’s advancements on peace and justice, the
paramilitaries, military and guerrillas carry on threatening,
terrorizing and assassinating union leaders and Afro-Colombian and
Indigenous peasants. Impunity continues unabated and President
Bush’s FTA campaign ignores the real threats to national security:
injustice, impunity, lack of governance, and disrespect for human rights. Trade alone will not resolve these threats and in fact there are vital conditions that need to be met to ensure just trade.
We join people all over the United States who are calling for
international trade and investment systems that respect and promote the
dignity of Afro-Colombians and Indigenous peoples, ensure the
development and well-being of these vulnerable populations, foster
gender and racial equity and lead to environmental sustainability. The
current FTA fails to do that, and will only increase the plight of
Afro-Colombians:
1. A Threat to Ethnic and Human Rights
The FTA was conceived by violating the rule of law. It was not
consulted with Afro-Colombians or Indigenous Peoples as required by the
Colombian constitution and ILO convention 169. These laws were created
to protect Indigenous and Afro-Colombian’s rights to territory,
environment, food security, and to self determination. The FTA violates
these laws and is therefore a threat to their rights.
2. A Threat to Land Ownership and a Dignified Life
Land is a principle of life and strengthens identity for ethnic groups
in Colombia. As land is threatened, the right to life is threatened.
Systematic human rights violations including murder, terror, and forced
displacement, are used on a daily basis to take over Afro-Colombian and
Indigenous lands that are rich in natural resources. Of the
Afro-Colombians who held title to their land 79% are currently homeless
due to this violence. In Mexico, the North American Free Trade
Agreement caused the displacement of 3 million rural farmers,
Colombia’s ethnic and rural populations cannot afford further
displacements. The FTA cannot be discussed or voted on until
Afro-Colombians and Indigenous are able to safely return and live on
their lands.
3. A Threat to the Environment
The FTA contains an ambitious project to supply the world with
bio-fuels produced from Oil Palm, sugar cane and corn’s large scale
cultivation. Large scale monocrops target the best lands, most of which
are collectively and individually owned by Afro-Colombian grassroots
communities. Oil palm cultivation has been linked to massacres and
expropriation by paramilitaries in Chocó, Nariño, South of Urabá and
the East Llanos region. Nevertheless, the Colombian government aspires
to grow 6 million hectares of this product by 2020. The cultivation of
just 456 hectares of African palm requires 86 kilometers of drains and
11 kilometers of roads. This type of infrastructure has extremely high
cultural, social and environmental cost for the communities, the nation
and the world. To approve the FTA is to approve large scale monocrops
that will devastate environmental heritage of humanity.
4. A Threat to Colombia’s National Sovereignty
The FTA will undermine Colombia’s sovereignty by allowing corporations
to sue governments that pass environmental and public health laws that
might reduce corporate profits. The to pre-emptive legal changes the
Colombian government made in preparation for the FTA negotiations,
undermine the rights to self determination and governance of the ethnic
groups, particular those rights that Afro-Colombians, gained through a
legal framework created by Law 70/93. These pre-emptive changes
consequently jeopardize their cultural rights and their rights over
traditional knowledge and natural resources. In the same way, while
the US advocates for protection of the US population’s food security,
the U.S. and Colombian government put Colombia’s food security at risk
by promoting extractive industries and large scale monocrops,
increasing food imports, and adopting public and economic policies that
contribute to the most unequal distribution of land in Latin America.
Arguing that the FTA is a matter of national security to approve it
undermines Colombia’s ethnic groups’ most basic right, the right to be
fed.
5. A Threat to Labor Rights President
Bush and President Uribe along with FTA supporters insist there is
improvement in the situation for labor unions and that the FTA will
bring more employment. But they forget that plantation based economies
have a well known history of labor rights violations. Indeed, sugar
cane, African oil palm, plantain plantations in the past and the
present have been characterize by violent expropriation of land, slave
like labor conditions, and labor union repression. As Colombia moves
toward agricultural imports while using rich and productive lands for
bio-fuels, subsistence farmers are violently forced to migrate and
urban workers face the threat of lower wages as competition increases.
Since Afro-Colombian communities have an agricultural vocation and
strong network of support based on rural extended families, their lost
is greater in terms of productivity, labor and employment. And
Afro-Colombians face additional racism and discrimination in the labor
market which leads to unequal opportunities and ignores their
existence, contributions and struggles within the larger society.
Under these circumstances, considering the US-Colombia FTA is a threat
to the security of a population that is a third of the Colombian
population and a significant part of the African Diaspora.
A few calls can sway your members of Congress to take a public stand. It’s easy. Here’s how:
- Call (202) 224-3121 and ask the Capitol Switchboard operator to connect you to your member of Congress’ office. Visit www.congress.org <http://www.congress.org/> to find out who represents you in Congress.
- Talking Point: Please stop President Bush from forcing a vote on the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement by taking a public stance against it. Or select one of the above talking points.
- And Call 1-202-224-3121 again and ask for one of your two senators. Repeat the message, than call your other senator.

