Political Report # 1427
Climate Justice Means Solidarity with Colombia
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Back in 2015, I went with leaders of the Fensuagro
agricultural workers federation to observe a series of consultations in the
coffee growing areas of the Department of Tolima. These consultations were to
ask rural communities about what their hopes were for the pending Peace Accord,
and what kinds of benefits and developments they looked forward to via the
agreement. A major component of the accord, which would be finalized in
November 2016, was a commitment by the state for rural development to create
alternatives to the cultivation of crops with illicit uses, open up new
markets, and build decent roads to get those crops to those markets.
I was very surprised by the main content of the
consultations. Yes, the farmers talked about their expectations for peace. Yes,
they talked about the relief they longed to experience cultivating crops
without fear of war and political violence. But what they talked even more
about had to do with their concerns around climate change. In every community
we visited, we heard about how the farmers were being impacted by new weather
patterns that were shrinking the zones where coffee could be grown. They also talked
about new infestations of pests that were plaguing their fields as a result of
warming temperatures. The issue of substitution was no longer just one of
converting illicit cultivation to licit. They were discussing substituting new
crops for coffee because the ecosystem had been irreversibly altered.
Since the Peace Accord was implemented, virtually none of
the commitments of the state for rural development have been honored. The
administration of US President Donald Trump has advocated repeatedly against
those commitments and called for forced eradication of coca and marijuana
fields with no development in return. The White House has demanded a return to
the spraying of entire communities with the carcinogen glyphosate (developed by
Monsanto as RoundUp), that defoliates not only illegal crops, but also natural
vegetation as well as alternative and legal agricultural production. The puppet
administration of Colombia’s President Ivan Duque has been all too willing to
comply with Trump’s demands.
This has coincided with the highest levels of political
violence against popular movements and rural communities in many years. An oft
repeated statistic is that every 30 hours a social movement leader or human
rights defender is murdered in Colombia. Most these can also be described as
environmental activists and land and water protectors. As many as 75% of the
victims are from rural communities.
Colombia’s rural, indigenous, and Afro-Colombian communities
are truly on the front line when it comes to combating the effects of climate
change and other attacks on the environment. Earth defenders are killed, and
families are forcibly displaced because the territories they inhabit are
coveted by oil companies, mining companies, hydroelectric companies, big
agribusinesses wanting to impose vast fields of monoculture crops, and
narco-traffickers. One example is the village of Las Vegas in the municipality
of Dolores, Tolima, where coffee growers were being forced off their land
because the area had been found to contain oil reserves.
I have also traveled extensively in Colombia’s far north,
where the Department of La Guajira is found. In that department, every year 600
to 700 Wayuú indigenous children die because of a drought exacerbated by coal
mining developments. There and in the next-door Department of César, big coal
mining projects like Cerrejón and the Drummond mines are diverting water
resources and contaminating the water that remains. The region’s rivers and
streams are the lifeblood of local agriculture. The theft and contamination of
these water sources has worsened the effects of the drought, pushing hunger,
and malnutrition to epic proportions.
It is no secret how oil and coal mine development contribute
to global warming. However, what is less understood by many is the intimate
link between the struggle for climate justice and ecological sustainability,
and the struggle for liberation from Empire and the spread of global
capitalism. The diffusion of transnational and private access to resources is
backed up by the military might of the United States and its allies.
When we investigate what propels global warming, threat number
one is the US/NATO/Transnational Corporate Empire. It follows, then, that the
best way to save the Earth is to dismantle that Empire. The Empire has invested
more than $12 billion in Colombia to militarize that nation. Whether repressing
its own popular movements within or providing a launching pad for aggressions
against Venezuela and other independent voices in the region, the Empire is
using Colombia to silence and subdue those that stand in the way of
privatization.
The Empire leads the drive toward ecological collapse. The
single largest institutional source of greenhouse gasses is the Pentagon. In
2014, the Alliance for Global Justice was one of 37 popular movement
organizations from around the world that signed the “If You Want to Save the
World” declaration, which stated that,
“Only five companies are responsible for 12.5% of the
greenhouse gasses that are emitted into the atmosphere: Chevron-Texaco, Exxon-Mobil, British
Petroleum, Shell Oil and Conoco-Phillips. Their protector, the US armed forces
is in turn the single governmental or corporate institution that consumes more
petroleum products and emits more greenhouse gasses than any other in the
world. Nevertheless, the US demands that the climate impact caused by the US
military will not be brought up in any of the climate negotiations—and the UN
accepts this.
The declaration also spoke about exactly what it would take
to truly reverse this rush toward planetary destruction:
“The same imperialism that has caused so much damage to the
Global South today continues expanding and threatening the whole planet.
Consequently, the struggle for climate justice has converted into a struggle
for the liberation of all workers, peasants, indigenous and ecosystems. The
struggle against Empire is a struggle to save life on Earth.”
Any serious effort to save the world, to end war, to
establish peace and justice, including climate justice, is always, at its
heart, a struggle to dismantle the stranglehold of Empire. This is especially
true with regards to Colombia. Colombia provides the most crucial base of
operations for the Empire in Latin America. The US has access to military bases
throughout the country, with a permanent presence at seven of them. Colombia is
strategically positioned with coasts on both the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans,
and sits as a bridge connecting South America with Central America, the
Caribbean, and Mexico. Together, the neighboring nations of Colombia and
Venezuela form the strategic heart for Empire’s designs in the Americas. The
defense of Venezuela’s autonomy and support for Colombia’s liberation are two
of the most vital components of any effort to stop the Empire’s march toward
total domination of the region.
On Friday, September 20, young people around the world are
conducting a Climate Strike that will serve as a valiant wake-up call to all of
us to take action to curb the ecological disaster we are facing. The following
Friday, September 27, solidarity activists throughout North and Latin America
are coming together to serve notice to Colombian embassies and consulates of a
new permanent grassroots campaign to end the political violence and
displacement in Colombia. The actions on September 27 will kick off the campaign
for the People’s Travel Advisory on Colombia. This campaign is a response to an
ongoing effort to portray Colombia as a safe paradise for tourists. We are saying, as internationalists, that
Colombia is not safe until political violence has ended and the Peace Accord is
honored. Both the Climate Strike and the September 27 actions are interrelated.
It is up to us to make the connection: climate justice and liberation from
Empire are two goals that cannot and must not be separated, that can only be achieved
together. Striking for the Climate and standing up for peace in Colombia are
good places to start.
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