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NEWS & LETTERS, October 2002

Colombian women lead resistance

An estimated 800,000 workers marched through the streets of Bogota, Colombia on Sep. 16 in opposition to Alvaro Uribe's presidency. This was the largest show of opposition to Uribe since he took power Aug. 7 and began his campaign to carry out the total militarization of the country, in concert with George W. Bush's assistance. The day's events, which were intended to be a general strike, would have been more massive had thousands of CAMPESINOS not been prevented from traveling to the capital by military blockades.

The day after taking power, Uribe announced a pilot project to recruit 600 "civilian informants" for the military, part of his stated aim during his campaign to arm a million such spies as one means to end Colombia's 38-year civil war.

The next day Bush gave Uribe authorization to use nearly $1.7 billion in U.S. military aid to fight the FARC-ELN rebels, money that until then was to have been used only for anti-drug operations. This huge shift in policy towards Colombia, justified as an anti-terrorism measure was followed on August 12 by Uribe signing a Draconian law limiting civil rights.

Then, on Sept. 1, Uribe announced that any war crimes committed by his military over the next seven years will fall outside the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court. Again, this came as a concerted action with Bush, who is insisting that American soldiers be immune to prosecution under the Court anywhere they operate.

What has been missed even in the alternative press is the response of Colombian women to Uribe's electoral victory. On July 25 20,000 women from all over the country held a "National Mobilization of Women Against the War" in the capital. More than 600 women's organizations prepared for the event over a period of several months with the aim of beginning of a "national movement of women against the war, a permanent process..."

This burgeoning movement has arisen in response to the failure of the peace negotiations between the government and the FARC, which in turn led to Uribe's "mano dura" electoral campaign and victory. Patricia Buritica, of Mujeres Colombianas por la Paz (Colombian Women for Peace), spoke about what has been taking place: "Women from various political tendencies have decided to put all our effort into fighting for a new process of negotiation that will include all ethnicities, races, the old and the young, rural and urban...a process that will involve the diverse country that we are."

--Mitch Weerth

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