Aug 30, 2013
"Long live the farmers' strike! Food sovereignty!" protesters chanted on Thursday during a pots-and-pans ringing march in the capital city of Bogota, while other marches took place across the country.
As Common Dreams reported:
Protesters are levying a broad range of concerns about public policies that devastate Colombia's workers, indigenous, and Afro-Colombian communities. The US-Colombia Free Trade Agreement has forced small farmers to compete with subsidized US products, made them more vulnerable to market fluctuations, and eroded their protections and social safety nets through the implementation of neoliberal policies domestically. Farmers are demanding more protections and services in a country beset with severe rural poverty.
Meanwhile, the Colombian government is handing out sweetheart deals to international mining companies while creating bans and roadblocks for Colombian miners. Likewise, the government is giving multinational food corporations access to land earmarked for poor Colombians. Healthcare workers are fighting a broad range of reforms aimed at gutting and privatizing Colombia's healthcare system. Truckers are demanding an end to low wages and high gas prices.
Journalist and geographer Teo Ballve told KPFA that the U.S free trade agreement implemented a year ago "locks these free market policies almost into law. All these things that were kind of unsystematically governing the economy have now become a binding international agreement. And, as happened with NAFTA in Mexico, the hardest hit sectors were the small, peasant farmers ... and here in Colombia you're seeing the same thing."
"The main staple crops of the country, things like potatoes, rice, which are still predominantly produced by small scale peasant farmers are the ones that are being hardest hit by subsidized crops from these other regions of the world. So these small, poor farmers can't compete with the crops that are coming into the country tax-free."
Inter Press Serviceadds:
Another target of the farmers' protests is "Resolution 970", passage of which was required by the U.S.-Colombia FTA, which protects genetically modified seeds under intellectual property rights, making the replanting of them a crime.
Students are among the supporters of the protests. As one protester explained, "We support the farmers, but also we have our own issues, we demand free and good quality education."
Colombia's right-wing President Juan Manuel Santos, who now admits the protests are "valid," is attempting to crush dissent with militarization.
"Yesterday I ordered the militarization of Bogota and I will do the same in any region or zone where the presence of soldiers is necessary," Santos said in a televised address, and readied as many as 50,000 troops.
Some Colombian officials including defense minister Juan Carlos Pinzon are blaming the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) for involvement in the protests.
But Ballve says that the country has a history of blaming FARC as a means to "delegitimize these mobilizations."
In addition to U.S. involvement via trade deals that have devastated rural farmers, its involvement is also seen at the end of some of the weapons pointed at protesters.
The marches "have been met with fierce repression by the US-backed military," Ballve contineud. "So there are obviously billions of US taxpayer dollars being funneled into this military that has one of the worst human rights records in the hemisphere."
Twitter users have been offering perspective on the uprising that, so far, has garnered little corporate media attention:
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"Long live the farmers' strike! Food sovereignty!" protesters chanted on Thursday during a pots-and-pans ringing march in the capital city of Bogota, while other marches took place across the country.
As Common Dreams reported:
Protesters are levying a broad range of concerns about public policies that devastate Colombia's workers, indigenous, and Afro-Colombian communities. The US-Colombia Free Trade Agreement has forced small farmers to compete with subsidized US products, made them more vulnerable to market fluctuations, and eroded their protections and social safety nets through the implementation of neoliberal policies domestically. Farmers are demanding more protections and services in a country beset with severe rural poverty.
Meanwhile, the Colombian government is handing out sweetheart deals to international mining companies while creating bans and roadblocks for Colombian miners. Likewise, the government is giving multinational food corporations access to land earmarked for poor Colombians. Healthcare workers are fighting a broad range of reforms aimed at gutting and privatizing Colombia's healthcare system. Truckers are demanding an end to low wages and high gas prices.
Journalist and geographer Teo Ballve told KPFA that the U.S free trade agreement implemented a year ago "locks these free market policies almost into law. All these things that were kind of unsystematically governing the economy have now become a binding international agreement. And, as happened with NAFTA in Mexico, the hardest hit sectors were the small, peasant farmers ... and here in Colombia you're seeing the same thing."
"The main staple crops of the country, things like potatoes, rice, which are still predominantly produced by small scale peasant farmers are the ones that are being hardest hit by subsidized crops from these other regions of the world. So these small, poor farmers can't compete with the crops that are coming into the country tax-free."
Inter Press Serviceadds:
Another target of the farmers' protests is "Resolution 970", passage of which was required by the U.S.-Colombia FTA, which protects genetically modified seeds under intellectual property rights, making the replanting of them a crime.
Students are among the supporters of the protests. As one protester explained, "We support the farmers, but also we have our own issues, we demand free and good quality education."
Colombia's right-wing President Juan Manuel Santos, who now admits the protests are "valid," is attempting to crush dissent with militarization.
"Yesterday I ordered the militarization of Bogota and I will do the same in any region or zone where the presence of soldiers is necessary," Santos said in a televised address, and readied as many as 50,000 troops.
Some Colombian officials including defense minister Juan Carlos Pinzon are blaming the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) for involvement in the protests.
But Ballve says that the country has a history of blaming FARC as a means to "delegitimize these mobilizations."
In addition to U.S. involvement via trade deals that have devastated rural farmers, its involvement is also seen at the end of some of the weapons pointed at protesters.
The marches "have been met with fierce repression by the US-backed military," Ballve contineud. "So there are obviously billions of US taxpayer dollars being funneled into this military that has one of the worst human rights records in the hemisphere."
Twitter users have been offering perspective on the uprising that, so far, has garnered little corporate media attention:
"Long live the farmers' strike! Food sovereignty!" protesters chanted on Thursday during a pots-and-pans ringing march in the capital city of Bogota, while other marches took place across the country.
As Common Dreams reported:
Protesters are levying a broad range of concerns about public policies that devastate Colombia's workers, indigenous, and Afro-Colombian communities. The US-Colombia Free Trade Agreement has forced small farmers to compete with subsidized US products, made them more vulnerable to market fluctuations, and eroded their protections and social safety nets through the implementation of neoliberal policies domestically. Farmers are demanding more protections and services in a country beset with severe rural poverty.
Meanwhile, the Colombian government is handing out sweetheart deals to international mining companies while creating bans and roadblocks for Colombian miners. Likewise, the government is giving multinational food corporations access to land earmarked for poor Colombians. Healthcare workers are fighting a broad range of reforms aimed at gutting and privatizing Colombia's healthcare system. Truckers are demanding an end to low wages and high gas prices.
Journalist and geographer Teo Ballve told KPFA that the U.S free trade agreement implemented a year ago "locks these free market policies almost into law. All these things that were kind of unsystematically governing the economy have now become a binding international agreement. And, as happened with NAFTA in Mexico, the hardest hit sectors were the small, peasant farmers ... and here in Colombia you're seeing the same thing."
"The main staple crops of the country, things like potatoes, rice, which are still predominantly produced by small scale peasant farmers are the ones that are being hardest hit by subsidized crops from these other regions of the world. So these small, poor farmers can't compete with the crops that are coming into the country tax-free."
Inter Press Serviceadds:
Another target of the farmers' protests is "Resolution 970", passage of which was required by the U.S.-Colombia FTA, which protects genetically modified seeds under intellectual property rights, making the replanting of them a crime.
Students are among the supporters of the protests. As one protester explained, "We support the farmers, but also we have our own issues, we demand free and good quality education."
Colombia's right-wing President Juan Manuel Santos, who now admits the protests are "valid," is attempting to crush dissent with militarization.
"Yesterday I ordered the militarization of Bogota and I will do the same in any region or zone where the presence of soldiers is necessary," Santos said in a televised address, and readied as many as 50,000 troops.
Some Colombian officials including defense minister Juan Carlos Pinzon are blaming the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) for involvement in the protests.
But Ballve says that the country has a history of blaming FARC as a means to "delegitimize these mobilizations."
In addition to U.S. involvement via trade deals that have devastated rural farmers, its involvement is also seen at the end of some of the weapons pointed at protesters.
The marches "have been met with fierce repression by the US-backed military," Ballve contineud. "So there are obviously billions of US taxpayer dollars being funneled into this military that has one of the worst human rights records in the hemisphere."
Twitter users have been offering perspective on the uprising that, so far, has garnered little corporate media attention:
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