Positive New Direction in Aid to Colombia
Signed Into Law
January 4, 2008
Many of the changes in aid to Colombia
that you contacted your members of Congress about in 2007 became law
when the president signed the all-rolled-into-one spending bill on December
26.
While still very far from the perfect world we dream about,
the law makes some positive changes in U.S. aid and policy towards Colombia.
The bill:
-- cuts military and police aid in the foreign operations bill by $141.5
million below what the President asked for, a 31 percent cut.
-- increases economic and social aid by $97.4 million, a 70 percent
increase.
-- includes aid that we called for to strengthen human rights and protect
victims of violence, including funding for investigation and prosecution
of human rights abuses; witness protection for victims; investigation
of mass graves; funding for legal representation of victims; and contributions
to the UN Human Rights office in Colombia.
-- cuts aid for the inhumane and environmentally damaging aerial spraying
program, and increases aid for alternative development programs.
-- ties the human rights conditions to 30%, not just 25%, of military
aid in the foreign operations bill.
-- includes $15 million for development aid for Afro-Colombian and indigenous
communities; includes in the human rights conditions that the Army must
respect the rights and territories of Afro-Colombian and indigenous
communities; and restricts investment in oil palm development if it
causes people to be displaced or environmental damage.
Click here to see
the complete text of legislation:
Click here to
read the blog entry by Center for International Policy's Adam Isacson:
What wasn't achieved? Among other things, we were not able to affect
funding in the less transparent and less accountable defense bill, which
also includes funding for counternarcotics programs, and we would have
liked the human rights conditions to apply to all military aid—and
for more military and aerial spraying funding to be cut.
But this is a real step forward!
It would not have been possible without all of your actions in support
of peace and human rights in Colombia.
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