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Fw: QUIET COUP IN COLOMBIA?
- Subject: Fw: QUIET COUP IN COLOMBIA?
- From: "Nello Margiotta" <animarg at tin.it>
- Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2001 10:28:58 +0200
------------------------- Via Workers World News Service Reprinted from the July 19, 2001 issue of Workers World newspaper ------------------------- EDITORIAL: QUIET COUP IN COLOMBIA? The Colombian regime and its U.S. mentors have no answers to the revolution gathering strength in that country except to increase the already bloody repression of the masses. That is the gist of a law expected to be signed by President Andres Pastrana that would give unprecedented powers to the Colombian military--setting up a virtual military dictatorship in that supposedly "democratic" country. It is yet another sign that U.S. intervention in Colombia, magnified when Congress last year approved $1.3 billion for the so-called Plan Colombia, has not brought about the economic relief promised and so urgently needed by the Colombian people. Instead it is building up an already repressive state into the kind of open dictatorship that ruled over South Vietnam during the years of the U.S. war there. The State Department, Central Intelligence Agency and Pentagon have become expert over the years at cloaking their violent interventions around the world in the sweetest of words. They employ an immense propaganda machine that churns out disinformation--lies, in other words. But they cannot hide the ugly truth forever. And that has some of the most ardent defenders of U.S. imperialism worried. The New York Times editorialized on July 10 that "a new law that has passed Colombia's Congress and awaits the signature of President Andres Pastrana would give the military dangerous new powers over civilians and lessen the possibility that officers would be held accountable for abusing them." The bill, admits the Times, "would make authorities such as mayors and governors subordinate to military commanders. The bill would also give the military the ability in many cases to authorize raids, arrest civilians and in some cases carry out investigations," all of which is "inconsistent with the Colombian constitution." "The new bill would also contribute to the impunity of the armed forces, by placing a two-month time limit on the ability of civilian authorities to open investigations of crimes committed in the course of military operations. Another part of the security law says that when people are arrested in the act of committing crimes, the military need only inform judges of their capture, instead of bringing them before the courts." The Times remembers how this kind of repression merely drove forward the revolutionary uprising of the people in Vietnam and eventually sickened U.S. soldiers and civilians alike until a mighty movement won an end to the war. This organ of Wall Street recognizes the great vulnerabilities of U.S. imperialism when pitted against a popular insurgency like the heroic revolutionary forces in Colombia.
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