While the U.S. Senate
gears up for a final vote following Tuesday’s temporary setback on
Fast-Track Trade Promotion Authority for the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP)—the U.S.’s
largest and most secretive Free Trade deal to date—today the U.S.-Colombia
Free Trade Agreement turned three
years old. All of its original critiques, particularly regarding labor and human rights concerns, continue to be relevant for Colombia and current TPP
negotiations. The Witness for Peace Colombia team sat down with Colombian human
rights defenders to get their thoughts on three years of Free Trade with the
U.S., now Colombia’s largest trading partner. Their responses highlight the
importance of continuing to oppose the TPP as a deal that’s bad for workers,
communities and the environment in the U.S. and abroad. Fast-Track's fate will likely be determined in the House of Representatives. If you haven't already, click here to tell your Representatives to vote no on Fast-Track and oppose the TPP.
Gerardo Cajamarca, Union Leader with Sinaltrainal who has
asylum in the U.S. due to paramilitary threats against his life:
“The effects of Free Trade and the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade
Agreement were felt well before the final agreement was implemented. They
weren’t agreements; they were impositions. And these impositions have made Free
Trade a process of war, extermination and genocide against the working class. Over
the last 20 years during which the Free Trade Agreement was being negotiated,
3,000 unionists in Colombia were murdered, and that this continues to happen
daily in Colombia. But it’s not just unionists. Afro-Colombians, small-scale
farmers and indigenous communities are also being assassinated and displaced.
It’s said that Colombia has the second highest rate of displacement in the
world, right? And why is that? It is the result of imposing Free Trade
Agreements. We do not accept these agreements and we view them as illegitimate.
“
These realities are
even clearer in the city of Buenaventura, Colombia’s largest port and
unofficial capital of its Pacific coast that has seen major changes due to plans to increase port capacity and infrastructure since Colombia
has signed onto Free Trade Agreements with the U.S., Canada, the Pacific
Alliance regional trading block, South Korea, and the European Union. Leaders
discuss unfettered port expansion and related tourist development projects, accompanied by increasingly
precarious labor conditions and displacement.
Jhon Jairo Castro Balanta, President of Buenaventura
Portworkers Union:
“Labor rights have been impacted by a lack of follow-through
from both sides: in this case the Colombian and the U.S. government, who only
demanded that Colombia comply with certain measures because the U.S. wanted to
ratify the Free Trade Agreement. But as soon as the FTA was approved pressure
to comply with the Labor
Action Plan has disappeared. We’ve seen exploitative subcontracting
practices increase and there are no protections for us. In a triumph for
noncompliance, we have a really weak Ministry of Labor, which didn’t hire the
number of labor inspectors that it was supposed to hire in order to combat
labor informality in a number of sectors, not just the ports.
Our situation is made worse by the proliferation of private
port authorities. We have at least five now…there’s no control over this expansion,
and we ask: How can they allow more ports to be built when they can’t even
manage to protect basic labor rights of their workers? If they’re going to
build more ports, let’s look first at working conditions. And it’s not only
affected us as workers, but as a community. With this issue of port expansion
they’re building warehouses everywhere and we think this is related to the
“relocation” of people that live in waterfront neighborhoods. We don’t see any
mechanisms that guarantee respect for us as workers or as a community.”
Danelly Bantu, a
community organizer with Black Community Processes (PCN) in Buenaventura,
echoed concerns regarding the social, cultural and community impacts of Free
Trade on Buenaventura.
“The issue isn’t just labor rights; it’s also about our fundamental rights to
identity, land, organizing and participating in our communities. Port expansion is the main cause of territorial
displacement, and it’s carried out in different ways. For example, there’s some
neighborhoods that were built entirely by the residents, who’ve lived there for
more than 80 years, and all of a sudden overnight someone claiming to be the
owner of that land appears with false papers, everything fabricated, saying
they are the real owners of that neighborhood—and it turns out that the neighborhood
is within the areas the government has identified in their studies as areas for
port expansion, completely ignoring the community already there.
In the waterfront area that includes the Neighborhoods Won
from the Sea, they want to build a touristic boardwalk. It’s a touristic
complement to large port companies that want all their new investors from
China, Ecuador, Panama to have tourist destinations to visit, and so all the
people that live along the water need to leave. [The government] is claiming
that the area is high risk [for tsunamis and natural disasters], but we ask,
how is it that the area is high-risk for the people that have lived there for
more than 150 years, but not for the large hotels and condos that they’re
projecting to build there? So we know it’s just an excuse to displace people to
make room for megaprojects, and this is happening everywhere: all over the
island and the mainland, and we don’t know where we’re going to live. Land is a
huge issue here and we don’t have anywhere to go, because wherever [port
companies] want to store a container the people there have to leave.”
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