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Noviembre 21 de 2007
Colombian Ironies: Political Prisoner Andrés Gil Unable to Attend
Human Rights Forum
Government Continues its Legal Assault on a Key Rural Social Organization
Por:Dan Feder/
Narco News
When the European Commission invited veteran Colombian social fighter
Andrés Gil Gutierrez to an annual human rights forum in Lisbon last
week, the representative who sent the invitation was apparently one of
the few who still hadn't heard: Gil isn't going to any such events for
a long time. Since the first days of October he has been an inmate at
the Modelo prison on Bucaramanga, northwest Colombia. Gil, and two of
his fellow leaders of the Peasant-Farmer Association of the Cimitarra
River Valley (along with one other member of the association) , were
arrested as the army and intelligence police raided a small village
where they were meeting with townspeople, as well as the association' s
office in the city of Barrancabermeja. [See a previous report here:
http://prensarural. org/spip/ spip.php? article698 ]
The association, known by its Spanish initials ACVC, is one of
Colombia's most influential campesino organizations, working for the
last 11 years in the conflictive Middle Magdalena region of the
country and part of a national rural social movement fighting for
better land and opportunities for the country's rural poor. The ACVC
has reported human rights violations and killings by the Colombian
army, and is vocally opposed to the U.S.-imposed drug war policies of
toxic crop fumigations that destroy farmers' livelihoods and the
surrounding environment.
The symbolism of this situation – where Colombia's most important
human rights defenders are being locked up or otherwise forced to
suspend their work faster than international groups can keep track –
will be lost on no one, and least of all Gil himself.
In a telephone interview from the Modelo prison, Gil said that he felt
extremely frustrated that he would be unable to go. "There are so many
things the association needs to say, so many things we need to
denounce, so much information and facts that we need to clarify for
all the participants of this important human rights forum in Lisbon.
It is a space that we feel is very important to develop, as the
Colombian state wants to silence the voices of the excluded, of the
marginalized, of the persecuted, and here we have no spaces to be heard."
Another ACVC member, also wanted by the Colombian justice system,
spoke to Narco News as well in recent days. Their testimonies give a
picture of a government unable to deal with challenges from civil
society other than to arbitrarily lock up social leaders. While
Colombian president Uribe's allies in the Bush administration have
spent the last few months gushing over the country's improved security
in a desperate, last-ditch attempt to get a Colombia-U.S. free trade
deal signed this year, opposition activists around the country have
complained that government persecution of their activities has stepped
up dramatically under the current administration.
The European Union's Ninth NGO Forum on Human Rights is scheduled for
December 6-7 in Lisbon. The commission sent Gil his invitation on
November 8, more than a month after his September 29 arrest. Gil described his arrest, speaking to Narco News through a fellow
inmate's cell phone. He explained that he, fellow ACVC founder Oscar
Duque and member Evaristo Mena were in the village of El Cagüí that
day speaking to the community about a new project they were organizing
to identify the most pressing problems facing the Cimitarra River
Valley and the Middle Magdalena (a large region between where
Magdalena River, Colombia's biggest, is born high up in the Andes and
where it empties into the Caribbean sea). They were speaking with a
large group of peasant farmers about the defense of their territory,
and about one of the organization' s central demands: the creation of a
special area there called a Zona de Reserva Campesina – a rural
agricultural reserve – where their way of life would be protected from
the various interests that look to take over or exploit their land.
(The government initially agreed to the Zona but has been stalling for
years now in actually implementing it). "We were holding the meeting there in the village," he said, "…when
DAS agents and the army raided us, surrounded the village center where
we were, and asked for identification from everyone there. They then
showed us an arrest warrant… The community began to protest, and there
was a lot of tension between the people and these state agents, who
fired shots against the action of the people."
The bullets were warning shots and no one was injured in the raid. "I am still surprised that there was a whole military deployment, with
the presence of more than 100 army troops. They came in two navy
corvettes and six Piranha gunboats. These are war vessels, which are
designed for chase and combat operations… In just the previous few
days, we were making public appearances at the office in
Barrancabermeja, where we even have government-provided security at
our office, so we don't understand why, when we are constantly meeting
with the government, we saw this veery aggressive operation, with a
disproportionate use of force and psychological pressure on us and on
the community."
Colombian prosecutors, in fact, do not have a case ready against the
ACVC leaders. According to Yenly Angélica, their lawyer and a member
of the human rights organization Humanidad Vigente, the four men were
denied bail last month and must wait as long as six months while
prosecutors continue to gather evidence to support their charge of
rebellion and collaboration with an armed rebel group. Even if they
are found innocent, they could easily each spend two years in jail as
their cases are resolved.
And many more farmers, organizers and community activists are in the
government's sights. After the raids, the Fiscalía, Colombia's justice
department, told the press it had 18 more warrants and there could be
more raids and arrests.
The Old Drug War Smear Cesar Jerez is another board member of the ACVC, and is also the
founder of the press agency Prensa Rural, which serves as an online
press outlet for several rural organizations. Jerez lives most of the
time in Barcelona now, gathering European support for the ACVC. He
recently found out that a warrant is out for his arrest also, and had
to be very careful the last time he visited Bogotá.
Jerez explained that both he and the ACVC leaders already in jail were
able to see copies of their files, and realized that the government
has been gathering evidence against them since 2002. The files include
information from at least 18 informants accusing the ssociation of
both using international aid to get money and equipment to the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrilla rebels, and of
being involved in cocaine trafficking.
The ACVC says the informants are lying and paid by the army to do so.
They say that among the case files they have seen are notes from
prosecutors observing that several the army's "informants" had slips
of paper in their pockets that they referred to when giving testimony,
as they could not remember the names of the people they were
supposedly bearing witness against.
"They hope to make it look like the money that we handle from
international assistance programs is for the guerrillas. The
informants repeat that over and over. These are projects we have
managed to implement there with great effort, but they say it is the
guerrillas that administer them directly. It's a very serious issue,
because it is an attack not just against us but against the whole
model of international cooperation. Because they informants go so far
as to claim that the Peace and Development program and its director
know about all of it. It is an indirect accusation against the most
important aid institution in Middle Magdelena."
Jerez said that in the last 10 years, the ACVC has received nearly $1
million to develop its projects, but that there is strict oversight
for the use of those funds and that many people have seen the
association using them firsthand. Other accusations from the
informants that he saw in the files bordered on the ridiculous: one
claimed the Red Cross was using its medical missions into Colombia's
conflict zones to bring the FARC weapons.
"We have always stated clearly and publicly that we need to have
dialog with the different parties in the conflict in order to fight
for human rights and development in the middle of a war," said Jerez. "We have always said that we meet and speak with both the Colombian
state and the guerrillas that are present in our area. Why is this
necessary? Because the war affects the civilian population very
seriously. The guerrillas in that area are a reference point of power,
of control, and often even territorial administration. So it would be
ridiculous to try to do what we do without having any contact with them."
Perhaps even more serious were repeated allegations in the files,
according to Jerez, of the ACVC participating in and profiting from
the trafficking of cocaine produced in its areas. So far no
drug-related charges have been filed, but Jerez says "the fact that
the informants have repeated so much that we buy and sell coca, what
they are looking to do is, in the medium term, introduce drug
trafficking charges, as has happened with other organizations and
other jailed social leaders."
Far from being drug traffickers, organizations like the ACVC have been
among the leaders in proposing alternatives to the coca economy that
has come to rule the most isolated regions of the Colombian
countryside. "What we say to the farmers is, look, we can keep using a
rural economy and resist on this land. It isn't strictly necessary to
plant coca, although obviously coca continues to be the only
alternative right now for them. No other crop is profitable, because
of the situation in the area. There are no roads, no infrastructure,
and the Colombian establishment has not given the campesinos any
choices. That is why coca continues to be a basic activity in the
regional economy."
The way the process works, all of these political prisoners are
essentially guilty until proven innocent. Especially with the many
informants lined up to testify against them, it falls on the ACVC to
prove that they haven't been working as a "political wing" of the FARC
rebels. But at this point, the prisoners and their lawyers expect to
win, even if waiting out the long process in jail is inevitable. It
wouldn't be the first time the state arrested a leading activist
knowing full well it had no case, just to get him or her out of action
for a while.
The public prosecutor in Barrancabermeja in charge of the case could
not be reached for comment. The support from abroad, said Jerez, has been "enormous, it's
impressive. We ourselves are very surprised. From statements by
grassroots organizations in different parts of the world, to
congressmen, parties, unions, social organizations. It gives us a lot
of confidence and morale, to know that we are right and that after
this process we will come out stronger, even though our compañeros may
spend a considerable amount of time in prison."
In the meantime, Gil and his colleagues are still doing what they do
best: organizing. In prison, he said, "we have found many campesinos
with incredible stories. Particularly, we are talking about campesinos
who had the bad luck to find themselves in places where army and
police operations were being carried out, at moments in which the
public forces needed to show results. They have been taken into
custody despite being widely known as regular farmers in the region.
There are even some old men here, accused by the police and the army
of being insurgents, guerrillas. They have no way of defending
themselves, so we have said that if we are being defended, then they
should be too. So we are looking into how we can all defend ourselves,
together." |