CAN Delegation 2006

SDS Member and CAN Activist Speaks at SOA Protest

Below is a transcription of the speech given by Kati Ketz at the 2006 SOA Protest in Ft. Benning, Georgia. Ketz went to Colombia in July 2006 with the Colombia Action Network delegation. She is an activist with SDS at UNC-Asheville.

Colombia: getting beyond the stereotype of the narco-trafficker

Both presidents Clinton and Bush have given the third highest amount of military aid in the world to the right-wing Colombian government in the name of “fighting the war on drugs.” In reality, the aid the U.S. sends is spent on a counterinsurgency war against the Colombian people. Along with other local and national activists, I went to Colombia this past summer to investigate the reality of the “war on drugs.”

Campesinos in Southwest Colombia Fight for Justice

Between May 12th and May 20th, over 150,000 Colombian campesinos (peasant farmers) of African, indigenous, and mestizo descent shut down the Pan-American Highway across southwestern Colombia. This mass mobilization (which was also a general strike, and which was accompanied by demonstrations of solidarity within cities in the region) was organized by the Popular Unity Process of Southwest Colombia, a regional coalition of campesino associations, labor unions, and other progressive groups.

Colombian Peasants Fight Back

U.S. anti-war activists traveled to Colombia in July on a human rights delegation organized by the Colombia Action Network. The delegation met with trade unions, peasant farmer associations and student organizations. FENSUAGRO (Federación Nacional Sindical Unitaria Agropecuaria, or the National Federation of Agricultural Farming Unions), Colombia’s national federation of peasants, hosted the U.S. activists. The delegation visited rural regions and documented the living conditions of Colombian peasants.

Notes from the field: Union peasants killed & disappeared

Report by CAN 2006 Delegation member Katrina Plotz

In July, four members of the Anti-War Committee and Colombia Action Network, (Meredith Aby, Erika Zurawski, and Jon and Katrina Plotz) traveled to Colombia to witness the impact of U.S. military aid to a government waging war against its own people. We were hosted by FENSUAGRO, the national peasant workers union.

Colombia is the third-largest recipient of U.S. aid. Since 2000, Colombia has received $4.7 billion from the military aid package, “Plan Colombia.” Originally proposed under the “War on Drugs,” the Bush administration increased aid to Colombia under the rhetoric of the “War on Terror.” The groups that constitute the armed resistance in Colombia’s fifty-year civil war are on the State Department’s list of terrorist organizations. This allows the Colombian military to violently intimidate anyone who questions the social, economic, and political policies of the Colombian government.