Chiquita
Colombian Fiscalia Investigating Chiquita and other Bananeros
Call to End Plan Colombia
Statement from the Colombia Action Network and call to action against Plan Colombia.
There is a growing debate in Congress concerning Plan Colombia. There needs to be an end to US military aid to Colombia. The almost 5 billion dollars the US has sent in military aid since 2000 has had horrendous results in Colombia. It has paid for military and para-military human rights abuses including massacres, disappearances, kidnapping, and threats of social justice and labor activists and their families.
The U.S. & Chiquita: Blood on their Hands!
Statement and analysis from the Colombia Action Network, presented at the Latin American Solidarity Conference in Chicago, April 13-15 2007.
In March, banana giant Chiquita plead guilty in Washington to doing business with the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia or AUC, a right-wing paramilitary organization that is responsible for some of the worst massacres in Colombia’s civil war. The State Department listed the AUC as a terrorist organization in 1997. Despite this, the top 8 Chiquita executives paid the AUC 1.7 million from 1997-2004. In addition, in 2001 Chiquita used one of their ships to deliver 3,000 AK-47 rifles & more than 2.5 million bullets for the AUC.
NPR: Colombia Tied to Paramilitary Murders of Unionists
Colombia's intelligence services compiled lists of union activists and gave them to right-wing paramilitaries, who then carried out assassinations, according to captured documents and a key witness.
The U.S. Congress is considering a proposed trade agreement with Colombia, and news of the government-paramilitary collaboration has put passage of that legislation in further jeopardy.
The Crimes of Chiquita Brands in Colombia
On December 6, 1928, in the municipal plaza of Ciénaga Magdalena, around 3000 men and women were assassinated for demanding that the U.S. transnational corporation, United Fruit Company, resolve the demands of the petitions presented to them by the union. On that day, the Colombian army, commanded by General Carlos Cortés Vargas, fired their arms against the masses of people to liquidate the workers’ protest.


