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Oxy, BP and Repsol
Oil companies behind violence in Colombia
By
Deirdre Griswold
Bogotá, Colombia
Published Aug 27, 2007 8:45 PM
In April a year ago, the Permanent Peoples Tribunal began a series of
investigations into the role of transnational corporations behind human rights
violations in Colombia.
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Graciela Castro speaks about the murder of her brother, Hugo
Horacio Hurtado Castro, 17, who had been in the woods near the
oil facility Caño Limón playing with his younger
brothers when he was shot by soldiers who gave no warning.
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Liliana Roa testified that paramilitaries
killed her husband, Rito Antonio DÃaz
Duarte. Their town had put a toll on heavy
vehicles carrying petroleum-drilling equipment
that ruined the highway. The Army
had demanded they lift the toll.
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Nini Johanna Cardozo. Her father, Tiberio Cardozo
Dueñas, a civic leader in Cravo Norte, was one of a group
tortured and killed by Army soldiers.
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Rubiel Vargas, below.
His brother, Oswaldo
Vargas, was assassinated
by paramilitaries
after his
civic organization
demanded that British
Petroleum pave the
roads and stop
polluting the
environment.
WW photos: Deirdre Griswold
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Its first three hearings, which took place in different Colombian cities,
focused on (1) how foreign-owned agribusinesses have affected the farmers and
the Indigenous peoples; (2) the role of the mining companies, and (3) the
impact of transnational-controlled development on biodiversity and the
environment.
On Aug. 3 and 4 of this year, the tribunal met again, this time in Bogotá,
the capital, and heard testimony about the reign of terror in those areas of
Colombia where huge oil companies have made big investments and are sucking out
even bigger profits from the “black gold” that lies beneath the
soil.
As described in our first article, dozens of people took the great risk of
describing in detail to a large audience at the Teachers’ Union
auditorium how their loved ones and comrades had been dragged out in the night
and executed for no crime other than having served as leaders and activists of
civil organizations—unions, farmers’ groups, rural cooperatives and
Indigenous associations.
A stinging indictment
When it was all over, the judges and co-judges issued a stinging indictment of
the Colombian government and military, the oil companies whose interests they
serve, and the U.S. government for allowing these crimes to continue with
impunity.
The Permanent Peoples Tribunal is based in Rome and has been in existence since
1979. The judges presiding at this session were law professor Dalmo de Abreu
Dallari of Brazil, a member of the International Commission of Jurists; Marcelo
Ferreira, professor of human rights at the University of Buenos Aires,
Argentina; and Antonio Pigrau Solé, professor of international public law
at the University of Tarragona in Catalonia in the Spanish state.
They were assisted by five co-judges: Natividad Almárcegui, a teacher with
the General Confederation of Labor (CGT) of Spain; Domingo Ankwash, president
of the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Amazonian Ecuador
(CONFENAIE); Deirdre Griswold, a member of the first Bertrand Russell
International War Crimes Tribunal in 1967, who represented the International
Action Center of the United States; Ralf Häussler-Ebert, a Lutheran
theologian from Germany; and Ivonne Yáñez, an Ecuadorian ecologist
and South American coordinator of Oilwatch.
This set of hearings focused on the role of U.S. giant Occidental Petroleum,
British Petroleum and Repsol, a Spanish company. After hearing from dozens of
eyewitnesses to state-sponsored crimes and from human rights experts, and
having received in written form an enormous body of research on the conduct of
these companies, the tribunal members at the end of the final session issued a
detailed but preliminary judgment. The final judgment based on all four
sittings of the tribunal will be made available at the end of this year.
The judges agreed that the three companies are following similar policies in
Colombia, which amount to “the looting of the natural resources and
systematic violence against the population. This has involved the destruction
of their social fabric, the carrying out of assassinations and persecutions
against their leaders as well as violations of the human rights of the majority
and the destruction of indigenous groups.”
The document summed up the testimonies that had been presented:
“According to the accusations, the abuses by these companies, which are
intended to exert control over the population and avoid any resistance to their
activities, have used a combination of various strategies, among them pressures
on the state to carry out policies benefiting them, such as the minimizing of
state regulation, flexibility in their contracts, the privatization of energy
companies, the granting of fiscal advantages, and the delivery of more
petroleum and gas reserves to them; moreover, there is the militarization of
social life, deepened by the application of Plan Colombia and by the direct
support given by the oil companies to the armed forces, legal and illegal, and
the promotion of corruption.”
Plan Colombia is the agreement between Washington and Bogotá that has
poured billions of dollars into the Colombian armed forces, all in the name of
the supposed “war on drugs.” Vast areas of the countryside have
been “fumigated”—aerially sprayed with toxic
chemicals—a method that does not distinguish between coca plants and a
farm family’s cornfield.
The tribunal saw a moving film documentary about the effects of these
“fumigations,” which leave the people covered with welts and
lesions in communities where there are few medical facilities to treat them or
deal with possible long-term health effects.
Since the killings and fumigations began, many impoverished Colombian farm
families, made refugees by the policies of their own government, have fled to
neighboring Venezuela. Much of their land is now being converted to cash
crops.
The tribunal found that the Colombian government had “criminalized”
social protest through arbitrary arrests and mass detentions under the charge
of “rebellion.” It also has failed to prosecute those authorities
responsible for heinous crimes such as kidnapping, torture and murder.
One of those testifying, Gustavo Petro, is an opposition senator in the
Colombian Congress. He described the people behind the killings as “those
who dress as senators in the morning, trade in cocaine in the afternoon and
give orders to the paramilitaries in the evening.”
The tribunal concluded that the paramilitaries “have been able to count
on the unrestricted support of the economic and political powers.”
Special role of U.S. government
In determining responsibility for the gross violations of human rights in
Colombia, the tribunal found that, in addition to the Colombian state and the
oil companies, the U.S. government also has played a very special role,
“defending its presumed right to intervene in any country in order to
preserve its security interests, including access to the sources of petroleum,
and having contributed decisively through concrete plans, human resources,
training and financing to the extreme militarization that surrounds the
exploitation of oil in Colombia, as it has also done in other parts of the
planet, with harmful consequences for the civilian population.”
There seemed to be virtually no coverage of the tribunal in the Colombian
media, although European and Asian reporters were there (and this reporter from
the U.S.). However, that doesn’t mean the Colombian government
wasn’t paying attention to this event.
At one point, just as the son and daughter of oil workers’ leader Marco
Chacón from Barranquilla were testifying about how their father had been
assassinated, plainclothes police pushed their way into the crowded hall and
stood on the stage facing the audience, cradling AK-47s. After the organizers
protested, they finally left, claiming they had come “because the senator
will be speaking”—something the senator had not requested.
Now that the tribunal and the many brave witnesses who came forward have done
their work, it is up to the progressive movements, especially workers who are
increasingly exploited by transnationals, wherever they may be, to bring
international solidarity to bear against these monstrous corporations and their
servants within the state.
Unofficial translation from the Spanish-language tribunal document
by Griswold, who served as a co-judge at the tribunal.
E-mail: [email protected]
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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