URGENT
COLOMBIA ACTION - CALL YOUR REPRESENTATIVE!
Representatives Janice Schakowsky and James
McGovern are currently circulating a letter in congress regarding
declarations by the President of Colombia Alvaro Uribe Velez
that could put international volunteers in Colombia and the communities
they work with at risk.
It seems the offices of Rep. Schakowsky and Mc Govern are receiving
many calls in support of the letter and that is wonderful - thank
you so much. However, the letter circulating in Congress is not
for individuals to sign on, but for members of congress. Please
call your own representative and ask her or him to sign this
urgent letter by June 24. Inform them that to sign on, Congressional
Members may contact Jon Samuels (Rep. Schakowsky) at 225-2111
or Cindy Buhl (Rep. McGovern) at 225-6101. Please do not call
Rep. Schakowski's or Mc Govern's office yourself but call your
own representative asking them to sign the letter.
If you don't know your representative¹s
name and contact information, go to:
http://www.visi.com/juan/congress
Or call the congressional switchboard at 202-224-3121.
Below you will find more information about
Uribe’s declaration,
the Peace Community and FOR’s work there.
Thank you very much for your continued support for human rights
and peace in Colombia.
INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTEERS THREATENED WITH ARREST AND DEPORTATION:
On May 27, the President of Colombia Alvaro
Uribe Velez, made public statements threatening the leaders of
the Peace Community
of San José de Apartadó (SJA) with arrest for allegedly "obstructing
justice." He quoted a complaint by the District Attorney,
which alleges that the community leaders do not permit its members
to testify to District Attorney personnel. Uribe also said that
San José de Apartadó "continues to present a
corridor of the FARC." In the past, accusations such as these
have made the Peace Community a target for paramilitary and military
violence against them. Uribe Velez also made statements threatening
internationals with arrest and deportation for supporting the Peace
Community in its alleged "obstruction of justice." The
FOR is one of the international organizations accompanying the
Peace Community, and is concerned for the security of its civilian
population and the international volunteers accompanying them.
On June 2, police and army agents entered
San José de Apartadó,
asked for the papers of members of Peace Brigades International
(which PBI members presented in good order), and stated that a
permanent police station would be established there, according
to a statement by the Peace Community. The agents also reportedly
asked for two community leaders by name, and about when the community
meets and what it talks about. Although the principles of the Peace
Community forbid selling goods to armed groups, soldiers forced
local merchants to sell them goods, saying, “just like you
sell to the guerrillas, you also have to sell to us,” the
community’s statement said. They stated that, if the police
or army wanted to occupy the community’s living areas, it
would put their children in danger, and the community as a civilian
population would be forced to displace.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
Uribe's statements and the police action
were made in the context of a "security council" meeting with local civilian and
military authorities after the explosion of a bomb in a discotheque
in the city of Apartadó that killed seven people and injured
over 100 on May 22.
The Community of SJA declared itself Peace
Community in 1997, stating that it does not support any armed
actor involved in Colombia's
decade long civil war. In a communiqué published on May
24, the Peace Community condemned the bombing calling it a "demented
act against the civilian population, which demonstrates how destructive
and unjust the war is." On the other hand, the Peace Community
has repeatedly called for an evaluation of the Colombian inter-institutional
commission in charge of investigating serious human rights violations
committed against them, because after years of investigation "none
of the perpetrators have been punished (…). Justice has not
been served." Due to the repeated serious crimes against the
Peace Community and its Colombian supporters, the Interamerican
Court of Human Rights has issued measures for their protection,
which the Colombian Constitutional Court reiterated in a decision
in favor of the Peace Community on April 15, 2004. The community
has also called for the presence in San José of civilian
government agencies.
The Fellowship of Reconciliation started its protective presence
by US volunteers in the Peace Community at the beginning of 2002
and Peace Brigades International has been accompanying SJA since
1999. It is an explicit part of the FOR Colombia Peace Presence
mandate that its workers respect Colombian law, and FOR volunteers
are working legally in Colombia with visas issued by the Colombian
government. FOR is concerned that international workers are threatened
for legally accompanying the Peace Community in its efforts to
affirm the rights of its members as a civilian population.
President Uribe also announced that a new
U.S.-trained “mobile
brigade” of the Army will be deployed to the Urabá region
(where San José de Apartadó is located). The deployment
would represent the further militarization of an area that already
faces a high level of presence by the Army, guerrillas, and paramilitary
groups.
Peace Community leaders and human rights
defenders tell us how important our international accompaniment
is for their daily survival.
Part of this accompaniment is our supporters’ backing of
our volunteers in the community. With your fax or call to your
congress member you can make a difference – every signature
under the congressional letter to President Uribe is an important
expression of support for the Peace Community and our accompaniment.
Thank you!
Link
to text of the Congressional Dear Colleague letter to President
Uribe.
For further information, contact the FOR Task Force on Latin America
and the Caribbean, tel 415-495-6334, email: forcolombia@igc.org