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political leftists, advocates for the poor, and non-political bystanders, and I expect that this current horrendous haul of the dead will be similarly constituted. I doubt that any of them will turn out to be armed guerrillas, and, even if they were, a) do leftist guerrillas not have some cause to be so passionately angry as to take up arms, in Colombia? and b) why kill people anonymously, and throw them into mass graves, if what you are doing is right? why have none been arrested and "brought to justice"?
The evidence is that Colombian rightwing paramilitaries, private mercenaries, the official state military, and the U.S. military have used "war on drugs" funding to suppress and brutalize people for their legitimate aspirations to justice, fairness and rightful, lawful democratic government. Democracy is succeeding in nearby countries--Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay and Nicaragua, with big social movements also in Paraguay and Peru (likely to win future elections). Not so in Colombia, a bastion of repression and injustice, and Bush's favorite place to send our money (aside from Dick Cheney's retirement fund). And we know that these rightwing paramilitaries are operating on the borders with Venezuela and Ecuador, trying to stir up trouble, and that official pesticide spraying in these areas is causing great harm. (The object of the pesticide spraying is not to eradicate cocaine--since the paramilitaries are major drug traffickers--but rather to drive out the small coca leaf growers and food producers (coca leafs for traditional local use), so the drug lords can move in, and, after them, the corporate biofuel (monoculture) producers.)
Look at the dramatic rise of rightwing death squad activity (the paramilitaries), which parallels Bush (our taxpayer) funding of armaments and other military equipment/training to the Uribe government, which has been closely tied to the paramilitaries. And I wonder about this segment called "Private Security Forces." We have had rumors of Blackwater or Blackwater-type mercenary activity in Colombia, and use of South American mercenaries in Iraq.
The stench of corruption, lawlessness and pure evil stretches all the way from Washington DC into the jungles and farm lands and villages of Colombia. And it seems like our party leaders (most of them) will no more disavow gangsterism and murder in Colombia than they will in Iraq. All done in our name.
As with the investigations here, in our Congress, investigation of these crimes is occurring in Colombia, in their case as the result of a "truth and demobilization" process. But in both cases, impunity for serious crimes is leading to more crimes. Take a look at the chart again. Human rights violations continue, but the perpetrators shift from the paramilitaries to the state police and military (and leftist guerrilla violations shrink to nothing). This was as of 2004, and there is little reason to believe that human rights violations and murders have ceased, or that who is doing them has changed. The fascists are doing most of the killing, whether official or not official. And the government that has tolerated all of this crime, and that acquired massive U.S. funding to foster it, and as a reward, is still in power.
Also, as with the Bush Junta's many crimes, crime on this scale requires structural change and reform. You may want to get at the truth, with some sort of "truth and reconciliation" process, but you cannot let the political and social and government conditions continue that allowed such major crime and corruption to occur. If you do, you are asking for a repeat. This is what is so insane about our Democratic Party leadership right now--and why we cannot help but suspect them of collusion. They are letting Bush, Cheney, Rove and others (the absconded Rumsfeld) get away with crimes--some of them quite heinous, such as torture, and the current bloodbath in Baghdad, and several that are treasonous--that would have gotten any previous administration impeached ten times over.
Colombia badly needs a peaceful, leftist (majorityist), democratic revolution, such as has occurred in other South American countries. Why aren't our Democratic leaders calling for this? Why are they repeating Bush "talking points" about South America? Why aren't they calling for serious government reform, and transparent elections, here and in Colombia?
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