The week after last time I wrote was a little bit calmer – I spent it working on the Coca-Cola campaign here in Bogotá and even managed to do a bit of writing for one of my PhD chapters (although no sooner had I finished than I saved an old version over it and had to write it all again – I blame the altitude). I also spent the day with one of the human rights defenders I got to know whilst I was here last time, who’s recently had a baby. We had a long discussion about the situation here and the ways it affects you emotionally – she’s had numerous death threats, including a funeral wreath delivered to her mother’s house, and told me about the first time someone she worked with was “disappeared”, when she was just 16, and the trauma of searching for him in hospital morgues and rubbish tips without finding his body, and how all the killings here are something she can’t get still can’t used to 20 years later, whether or not it’s someone she knows. It was good have an open conversation about that side of things, because often the immediacy of events doesn’t leave much time for that sort of discussion and I think I was more affected than I’d realised by finding myself at the funeral of another student within days of arriving in Colombia having left the last time just after the murder Jhonny Silva. It’s not something I ever want to get hardened to and whilst, so far, it’s not been anyone I know, the more time I spend here and the more people I get to know, the more likely it is that one day it will be.
Last Wednesday, 22nd March, was the six month anniversary of Jhonny’s murder and I was invited to Cali to take part in the assembly that had been organised by the university community. Whilst I was waiting for my flight in Bogotá airport I bumped into the lovely Euripedes, who some of you know (in which case he sends he says hello) – he’s a Coca-Cola worker and leader of the food-workers’ union Sinaltrainal in Baranquilla on Colombia’s Atlantic Coast (parts of which have been completely taken over by state-linked paramilitaries) and has also had death threats for the work the union are – not just “traditional” trade union activities but human rights work, popular education with around the problems of hunger and the practices of food and agriculture multinationals and projects to support communities’ sovereignty over their own food production and consumption. In Colombia, more people die from hunger than as result of the armed conflict and the dirty war being carried out against social organisations – although the two are linked, since the state terrorism is a way of dealing with resistance to an economic model that favours multinational corporations and rich Colombians over the needs of the majority of the Colombian population.
Under this system – which is being imposed on countries across the world in a process often referred to “globalisation” – as if it was somehow natural or inevitable – food (along with healthcare, education and so on) is seen as a business, not as a way of meeting people’s needs nor as an important part of culture. Locally-based, environmentally sustainable forms of food production and consumption are being pushed out of existence by competition from cheap (often processed and unhealthy) imports from abroad, whilst production in Colombia is increasingly controlled – from the seeds to the marketing of the final product – by multinational corporations and takes the form of megaprojects of crops for export, such as African palm oil, an important product for the fast-food industry. This is happening all over the world but in Colombia the paramilitaries displace entire peasant communities from their land in the service of this model. About 3% of peasants have been killed in numerous rural massacres, whilst the rest are displaced to settlements on the edges of the cities. The multinationals who take their place in food production often work with the paramilitaries to keep wages at a poverty level – this weekend Coca-Cola, Nestlé and Chiquita Brands are being tried by the People’s Permanent Tribunal for crimes against humanity, having been directly involved in the assassination and intimidation of unionised workers, in Nestlé’s case with the intimidation of workers who blew the whistle on the company’s repackaging of out-of-date milk imports which killed several children in the city of Medellín a few years ago.
I spent ten days in Cali, working on the campaign against impunity for the killing of Jhonny Silva. The lawyer for the case also travel to Cali for the assembly and reported on how the Attorney General’s office have changed the investigating officer 6 times over the last 6 months and talked about the various ways in which the legal system in Colombia works as a tool of state terrorism. We also heard from the Truth Commission which has been convened by the university community and human rights organisations to conduct an independent inquiry into Jhonny’s murder. The idea behind Truth Commissions is that they form an alternative justice process for judging state agents in situations of extreme violence where the state justice system is ineffective and that they act as a political tool by recovering refusing to let the state erase the historical memory of the violence and its victims. The People’s Permanent Tribunal serves a similar purpose. During my time in Cali, I met with members of the various organisations involved in the Commission and talked about how to carry the campaign forward, as well as with Jhonny’s parents, who have had several threats because of how outspoken they are being about his murder.
I also gave a report at the assembly about what we’d been doing in England – which was a bit nerve-wracking as, in typical Colombian style, I was only given a few minutes notice that I was going to have to speak in front of several hundred people. Still, people were pleased to hear about what we’d been doing and a rather high-profile few days followed on from that, during which I had to record interviews for TV and a for a documentary about our experiences on the day Jhonny was killed. Surprisingly, this was far more intimidating than public speaking– for some reason I was rendered completely incapable of saying “tear gas” in Spanish, so they had to re-take the interview several times, by which time everyone was laughing so much that none of us could speak. Yesterday (Thurs 30th), the university community organised a “Carnival for Life and Against Impunity” to commemorate six months since Jhonny’s murder and keep up the profile of the case. After so many interviews and the like, I wanted to lower my profile a bit – more because I’m here on a tourist visa than because I’m likely to become a target – but in the morning, when we were planting sunflowers in a garden of remembrance for Jhonny, his parents asked me to join them for the first part of the march before I went to the airport. Luckily, because it was a carnival, some of the students I’ve been working with were able to sort me out with bright pink Dame Edna Everidge glasses and a hat, which supposedly made me stand out a bit less!
Despite it being an exhausting few days in Cali, it was good to catch up with friends, some of whom I’d got quite close to last time I was here. I stayed some of the time with a friend who is a social movement leader in one of the city’s poorest barrios and a researcher for the Nunca Mas (Never Again) project, which documents all the human rights abuses in the country. We spent hours talking about theory, music, boys and what not, and even managed to spend a day swimming the river with her 8 year-old daughter and some of the students from the university. I also stayed with the family of one of the leaders of the university workers union – he has an armed escort (provided by the state to threatened trade unionist and others under an order from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights). It was a bit weird being driven around by two enormous men with guns in their belts – especially when one of them was very into his salsa and kept breaking into surprisingly high-pitched harmonies when his favourite tunes were played on the radio.
When I got back to Bogotá last night, it was to find that I had, in my absence, been cruelly evicted from my bed by a Spanish bloke and that the house, which has five beds and a few mattresses, was temporarily home to ten people from various European countries who are here for the tribunal into the food and agriculture multinationals this weekend. So it’s all a bit mad here at the moment. More in a few days/weeks…