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ICFTU
November 1999
Unionists in Colombia: a high-risk occupation
Summary of the report prepared by the Colombian Commission of
Jurists for the Workers' Confederation of Colombia (CTC), the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) and the Inter-American Regional
Workers' Organisation (ICFTU-ORIT)
1. Introduction
At its 276th Session, which opens on 16 November 1999, the Governing
Body of the International Labour Office (ILO) will decide on the appointment
of a Commission of Inquiry on Colombia's respect of ILO Conventions no.
87 and 98 concerning the protection of the freedom of association and the
right to collective bargaining, ratified by Colombia on 16/11/1976. Such
a measure would be the logical outcome of a complaint lodged under the
terms of article 26 of the ILO Constitution by 26 Workers' Delegates on
12 June 1998 at the 86th International Labour Conference in Geneva. The
aim of this report is to set before the international community the overriding
reasons for initiating this important procedure without delay.
2. Assassinations and other violations of trade union rights in Colombia
It is public knowledge that the trade union rights situation in Colombia
is disastrous. Since 1987, over 2,500 trade union activists and leaders
have been murdered there. Many more have been kidnapped, tortured, threatened
with their lives and persecuted in numerous ways, while thousands have
been forced to flee their town, their region, or even the country itself.
In collaboration with its regional organisation (ICFTU-ORIT) and its affiliated
organisations in the region, the International Confederation of Free Trade
Unions has for several years now been organising programmes aimed at protecting
the lives of these trade unionists and sheltering them in safer countries.
According to the latest figures given in the report, nearly 28% of the
crimes against trade unionists can be attributed to paramilitary groups
close to the armed forces, while another 4% have been carried out by the
army itself. A small proportion (less than 1%) can be attributed to far-left
guerrilla groups, while the remainder cannot be directly attributed to
any one group.
Far from improving, the situation persists: between January and July
1999, 37 Colombian trade unionists were assassinated, two were abducted
and have disappeared, eight were the victims of attempted assassinations
or abductions, 30 received death threats and 20 were unfairly arrested
by the State. These figures, and many others, are set out in detail in
the present report, published simultaneously in Latin America and Europe
by the Colombian national trade union centres the CTC and the CUT, the
ICFTU and its regional organisation for the Americas, ORIT. The report
also examines the blatant contradiction between Colombian labour legislation
and the international labour standards guaranteed by the above-mentioned
Conventions 87 and 98. The ILO's Committee on Freedom of Association (CFA)
has been looking at these two aspects of the Colombian situation for many
years. Since 1986 - the beginning of the period examined in the attached
document - the CFA has published no less than 41 reports on this question,
each examining complaints lodged by both Colombian and international organisations.
The last report of the Committee (314th report of the CFA, 274th Session
of the ILO Governing Body, March 1999) contains no less than 187 pages!
3. ILO supervisory bodies and mechanisms
Both the CFA and the Committee of Experts on the Application of ILO
Conventions and Recommendations have been urging the Colombian government
for years to adopt concrete measures both as regards the protection of
trade unionists' right to life and bringing domestic legislation in line
with international labour law. For many years, these two ILO supervisory
bodies have firmly condemned the authorities' failure to act in these two
areas. They have been particularly critical, since 1988, of the impunity
enjoyed by the perpetrators of the crimes committed against trade unionists,
an impunity which, says the CFA, "generates more violence". The Colombian
government itself admitted to the ILO in 1990 that "only in rare exceptions
have the judicial inquiries undertaken since 1986 led to the identification
or sentencing of those responsible for the assassinations and disappearances".
In 1995, the CFA "[expressed] its concern that (2) the numerous acts of
violence which characterise trade union life in the country (2)have involved
a large number of trade union leaders and members" and "[drew] the attention
of the Government to the fact that trade union rights can only be exercised
in a climate that is free from violence, pressure or threats of any kind
against trade unionists." The CFA also called the attention of Colombia's
authorities to the fact that "it is for governments to ensure that this
principle is respected" .
Despite the government's many attempts to justify itself, its professions
of democratic good faith and, notably, the creation of numerous official
bodies supposed to put an end to the violence, the CFA has had to examine
the case of Colombia at virtually every one of its sessions since 1993,
particularly in 1997, 1998 and 1999. The report of a new ILO "direct contact"
mission in 1996 is implacable on this point. Commenting on the facts reported
by the mission, "The Committee reiterates the grave concern it previously
expressed when it examined this case in its meetings of March 1997 and
March 1998 [cf. 306th and 309th Reports, paragraphs. 274 and 82], regarding
the allegations which relate principally to murders (over 150), disappearances,
physical aggression, detentions and death threats against trade union officials
and members, and raids on trade union premises. The Committee deplores
that it must acknowledge not only that violence against trade unions has
not declined but that allegations communicated in recent years (1997-98)
indicate that it appears to have increased. Similarly, the Committee is
deeply concerned to find that there is no indication that any perpetrators
of the alleged acts of violence against trade union officials and members
have been arrested, tried and sentenced, thereby demonstrating the "total
impunity" reported by the National Procurator to the direct contacts mission."
Furthermore, "the Committee observes that Jorge Ortega Garc6a, Vice-President
of the CUT, was among the trade union leaders murdered in October 1998,
who the day he was murdered had signed a communication presenting new allegations
relating to this case. The Committee deeply deplores the murder of Mr.
Ortega Garc6a and observes that this is the second time that a trade union
leader submitting a complaint of violations of trade union rights before
the Committee on Freedom of Association is murdered."
It should also be noted that the Committee repeatedly invited the Colombian
government to take the necessary measures to dismantle the paramilitary
groups and "self-defence" groups "whose acts of violence primarily affect
trade unionists in many regions of the country (...) and prevent the normal
development of trade union activities in various areas of the country.
4. The Colombian government's diplomatic offensive
It was these failings, namely the refusal of successive Colombian governments
to take decisive action in response to the situation, that led to the complaint
lodged in June 1998 by the 26 Workers' Delegates to the 86th Conference.
Since the lodging of the complaint, however, President Pastrana's government
has launched a diplomatic offensive at the highest level aimed at preventing
the setting up of the Commission of Inquiry. While it is true that an ILO
Commission of Inquiry is an extremely serious step in the international
legal order, no new information has been provided by the Colombian authorities
since the complaint in June 1998 to justify the abandoning of this procedure.
In the course of several visits abroad by the highest representatives of
the State, including President Pastrana himself, and during the last three
sessions of the ILO Governing Body, the Colombian government has taken
refuge in arguments which the ILO long ago proved to be groundless. They
are described in detail in the attached report. They relate mainly to the
government's supposed efforts to set up legal and administrative mechanisms
to eradicate political violence in the country and their claims that the
creation of such a Commission of Inquiry would have a negative impact on
the peace process including, specifically, the negotiations the government
is currently involved in with far-left guerrilla groups. Another argument
the government insists on is that the acts of violence against the trade
unionists "are just another expression of the armed conflict and the various
forms of criminality in the country". The government's most recent initiative
was to set out these arguments once again in a three-page official letter
sent on 12 October 1999 by the Colombian Embassy in the United Kingdom
to Bill Brett, a British trade unionist and Vice-Chairman of the ILO Governing
Body, urging him to use his good offices to prevent the appointment of
a Commission of Inquiry.
5. Conclusions
Faced, on the one hand, with the obvious bad faith of the Colombian
government in this affair, and on the other with the continued assassination
of their members and leaders, exacerbated by the "total impunity" that
characterises these exceptionally serious violations of human rights, the
Colombian national trade union organisations CTC (affiliated to the ICFTU)
and CUT are stridently demanding the setting up of an ILO Commission of
Inquiry and have categorically rejected the arguments and delaying tactics
of the Colombian government. It stands to reason that these representative
workers' organisations cannot be suspected either of working against the
higher interests of the Colombian nation or of seeking the continuation
of the internal armed conflict or, still less, of wanting to harm their
country's image on the international stage.
On the contrary, the Colombian trade unions should be given recognition
for their unwavering attachment to the principles of international human
rights law, international humanitarian law and, last but not least, to
internationally recognised labour standards as codified by the ILO. The
trust they place in the ILO's supervisory mechanisms and, in particular,
in the considerable help that the conclusions and recommendations of the
Commission of Inquiry would give to the Colombian government, fully justifies
support from all the Governments, Employers and Workers represented on
the Governing Body for the setting up setting up, without further delay,
of the said Commission.
The International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU), which
represents 124 million workers throughout the world organised in 213 affiliated
organisations in 143 countries and territories, and its regional organisation
for the Americas, the Inter-American Workers' Organisation (ICFTU-ORIT),
representing the vast majority of organised workers in the Americas, will
relentlessly pursue the same objective, with the help of their affiliated
organisations and the International Trade Secretariats (ITSs).
As explained above, and as described in the attached report, both the
Colombian and international trade union organisations and the ILO itself
have repeatedly established the targeted, systematic nature of the mass
assassinations of trade unionists in the country. This phenomenon, hence,
cannot under any circumstances be analysed purely within the framework
of ordinary violence in Colombia, contrary to the arguments put forward
by the Colombian government. As we approach the opening of the next session
of the ILO Governing Body on 16 November in Geneva, it is the duty of the
international trade union movement to recall unequivocally before the international
community that, under the terms of customary international law, of which
the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court constitutes the most
recent relevant interpretation, the systematic or mass persecution of a
civilian population or a part of that population and enforced disappearances
are constitutive of crimes against humanity. For such are the practices
to which some members of the Governing Body chose to close their eyes,
namely those who continue to oppose the setting up of an ILO Commission
of Inquiry on violations of trade union rights in Colombia.
Brussels, November 1999.
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) Boulevard
Emile Jacqmain 155, B - 1210 Brussels, Belgium. For more information please
contact: ICFTU Department of Trade Union Rights Tel. 32.2.224.02.03 Fax:
32.2.224.02.97 E-mail: turights@icftu.org
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