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Column: Our Life and Times
April, 1999


Central America after Mitch and Clinton

by Kevin A. Barry and Mary Holmes

President Bill Clinton traveled to Central America March 8-11 prepared to demonstrate his official concern for the tens of thousands of people suffering hunger, disease, homelessness and unemployment in the aftermath of Hurricane Mitch.

Overshadowing Clinton's trip is the "unnatural" disaster of decades of U.S. government support for military regimes and their death squads. The last U.S. president to visit Central America was Ronald Reagan in 1982, who came to lavish praise and money on the contras.

The results of U.S. policy in Central America were summarized for one country, Guatemala, when the independent Commission for Historical Clarification issued a report in February, condemning the state for torture, kidnappings and executions of nearly all the 200,000 people killed since the anti-left war began in the 1960s.

The report was blunt in confirming the "open" secret of U.S.-CIA support of successive military dictatorships. It was equally direct in calling the military campaign in the countryside "genocide," the "aggressive, racist and extremely cruel nature" of which "resulted in the massive extermination of defenseless Mayan communities." The charge of genocide is not covered by the various amnesties which have been passed to shield the military.

The report also concluded that U.S. government sponsorship and protection of U.S. companies "exercised pressure to maintain the country's archaic and unjust socio-economic structure."

Clinton did acknowlege U.S. responsibility for propping up the military in Guatemala and El Salvador, using Honduras as one big U.S. military base, and funding the contras in Nicaragua by characterizing past U.S. covert and open aid and comfort to the military butchers as a "mistake." In El Salvador, at the height of war, the U.S. was funnelling $400 million a year; now it is down to $34 million.

Clinton's talk of a new "springtime of renewal" in U.S.-Central America relations sounded hollow in light of the pressing needs of the people. A huge portion of agribusiness has been wiped out for the near term, from coffee in Nicaragua, to bananas in Guatemala and Honduras. Over 40,000 rural workers and their families depend on the banana industry alone in Honduras. The large U.S. growers, Chiquita and Standard Fruit (Dole), are already rebuilding, and a great part of foreign aid funding is to be spent directly on the infrastructure so these foreign capitalists can get back on their exploitative feet.

It's also clear that capital, especially in the export sphere, is relentless in resisting the growing labor struggles in Central America, on the plantations and in the maquiladoras. Union activists in Honduras, who have waged a bitter decade-long struggle against Chiquita and Standard Fruit, say that the growers are using the disaster of Mitch, when most banana workers don't have jobs and the power to strike, to change work rules, adding more jobs onto each laborer. They fear that when the next harvest comes in, there will be far fewer workers.

In February, the clothing manufacturer Phillips-Van Heusen closed its Guatemala City factory-the only unionized shop of the some 200 export-oriented apparel factories there. Workers had struggled to improve wages and working consdition for six years and finally won a union contract in 1997.

The Clinton administration did not leave behind any substantive promises for the Central American governments which are clamoring for long-term debt relief and entry into a NAFTAesque market arrangement with the U.S. Instead, it is still intent on deporting the thousands of Mitch refugees who took matters into their own hands by heading north.



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