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June 10, 2004
Dear Colleague:
We urge you to sign onto the following letter to Colombian
President Alvaro Uribe in response to recent comments he made criticizing
humanitarian organizations working in Colombia. We believe President Uribe's
comments could endanger the lives of U.S. citizens and others working
to promote and protect human rights in Colombia, and we hope you will
join us in expressing our concern over his comments and support for the
valuable work being carried out by international humanitarian workers
in Colombia. While many of us hold different views on the appropriate
U.S. policy toward Colombia, we can all agree that promoting human rights
is a worthy cause. Again, please join us in sending this important message
to President Uribe. The deadline for signing this letter is C.O.B. on
June 24.
Sincerely,
| /s/ |
/s/ |
| Jan Schakowsky |
James P. McGovern |
| Member of Congress |
Member of Congress |
June XX, 2004
The Honorable Alvaro Uribe Velez
President of Colombia
Palacio de Narino
Carrera 8, No. 7-26
Bogotá, Colombia
Dear President Uribe:
We are writing to express our serious concerns about
recent statements that you made questioning the legitimate work of international
human rights organizations in the Peace Community of San José de
Apartadó. We are familiar with and support the important work conducted
by such organizations as Peace Brigades International and the Fellowship
of Reconciliation in protecting and promoting human rights in Colombia.
Through their presence, these organizations have helped
to protect the rights of civilians in many communities, including San
José de Apartadó, which has suffered numerous massacres,
forced disappearances and other human rights violations. In recognition
of the vulnerability of the Peace Community of San José de Apartadó,
the Inter-American Court on Human Rights has on three occasions issued
Provisional Measures that call on Colombia to protect the community and
"the persons who offer services to the community." On April
15, 2004, the Constitutional Court of Colombia ruled that those Provisional
Measures are constitutional and that the Government of Colombia must ensure
their compliance.
We were troubled by the comments you made on May 27,
2004, when you suggested international organizations are obstructing justice
by declaring, "I want to remind the foreigners in San José
de Apartadó that in Colombia there is not, nor can there be, impunity
for either Colombians or for foreigners. If you come here, come here to
help our communities, not to obstruct justice." And you stated, "I
repeat my respectful submission to the DAS (Department of Administrative
Security) and the Police, that if these people obstruct justice again
they should be put in jail. And if it's necessary to deport them, they
should be deported."[1] Those hostile remarks lie in stark contrast
to the actual conduct of the international organizations present in the
community-including the Fellowship of Reconciliation, Navarra Nuevo Futuro,
and Peace Brigades International-which abide closely by all Colombian
laws, while carrying out their humanitarian missions.
Furthermore, we are concerned that on June 2nd, DAS
agents and a large contingent of soldiers entered San José de Apartadó
to present Peace Brigades International (PBI) volunteers with a written
order for a meeting. The stated reason for the meeting was to carry out
an "administrative check." However, when the two PBI volunteers
arrived at the DAS office they were subjected to interrogation-like questioning
and were told to sign a legal document known as a "voluntary deposition"
("version libre") -which is usually the first step in a criminal
investigation. Subsequently, PBI met with Vice-President Francisco Santos
in an attempt to rectify the declarations made on May 27 and to share
its concern over the incidents with the DAS. PBI was accompanied in the
meeting by Michael Frühling, the Director of the Office of the U.N.
High Commissioner for Human Rights in Colombia
Unfortunately, this is not the first time that international
organizations working in the Urabá region have been the target
of unfounded allegations. On August 21, 2003, the then Commander of the
Colombian Armed Forces, General Jorge Enrique Mora, held a press conference
in which international organizations, including Peace Brigades International
and the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, were accused of turning a
blind eye to guerrilla activity of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC) in another community in Urabá. In response, the Colombian
Human Rights Ombudsman stated that this accusation "did not correspond
to reality and, on the contrary, could put the community at risk."
We are extremely concerned that these types of comments
are calling into question the work of many highly respected international
organizations in the region of Uraba. These comments are all the more
disheartening in that they directly contradict Presidential Directive
07 (9/9/03) as well as the Ministry of Defense's Directive 09 (7/8/03),
which order all civilian and military government officials to "refrain
from questioning the legitimacy of human rights organizations and their
members; making statements that discredit, persecute, or incite persecution
of said organizations; or making public or private declarations that stigmatize
the work of these organizations."
Given these concerns, we respectfully ask that you
undertake the following actions:
Ø That you, as President of the Republic, retract
your comments and publicly state your support of international human rights
organizations working in region.
Ø Call for a reaffirmation in writing by Vice
President Santos of the "carta de aval" (letter of support)
which has been granted to Peace Brigades International since the organization
first started working in Colombia in 1994.
Ø Ensure that clear directives are sent to all
civilian and military officials in the region of Uraba to support the
work of international organizations accompanying the Peace Community of
San José de Apartadó, and to recognize the important role
played by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and
the Colombian Human Rights Ombudsman (Defensoria del Pueblo).
Ø Implement the April 15, 2004 decision of the
Constitutional Court, Sentence T 327, which requires the full implementation
of the Provisional Measures granted to San José de Apartado by
the Inter-American Court on Human Rights that oblige the state, among
other requirements, to "continue to enable participation of the beneficiaries
of the provisional measures or their representatives in the planning and
implementation of these measures."
Mr. President, we care very deeply about Colombia and
want to help improve the situation in the country for all Colombians.
We reject actions that seek to undermine peace, like the bombing attack
that occurred on May 22, 2004 in a discotheque in Apartadó, a flagrant
violation of international humanitarian law against the civilian population.
We strongly believe that the work of international humanitarian organizations
like Peace Brigades International and the Fellowship of Reconciliation
is critical to the goal of a brighter future for Colombia and a reduction
of such violence. Therefore we urge you to publicly make clear your support
for the good work these organizations undertake.
Thank you for your attention to this matter, and we
look forward to hearing from you.
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[1] Official website of the President of the Republic
of Colombia: www.presidencia.gov.co/sne/2004/27/16272004.htm.
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