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  viva 
              Chomsky is professor of history and Latin American Studies at Salem 
              State College in Massachusetts. She is also a founder of the North 
              Shore Colombia Solidarity Committee, which has been working since 
              2002 with Colombian labor and popular movements, especially those 
              affected by the foreign-owned mining sector.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  
   BENNETT: 
            What happened to the community of Tabaco in 2001?&amp;nbsp;
  
 


 
  
   CHOMSKY: Tabaco was an Afro-Colombian village in the northernmost 
              Guajira province. It was the largest of a network of small indigenous 
              and Afro-Colombian villages, the only one with paved roads, a school, 
              a post office, and other government services. In August 2001 this 
              village was violently displaced as part of an expansion project 
              by the Cerrejon coal mine, the largest open-pit coal mine in the 
              world. The mine was then jointly owned by Exxon and a consortium 
              made up of BHP Billiton (an Australian company), Glencore (a Swiss 
              company), and Anglo-American (a British company).&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   As one resident described the events: &amp;ldquo;We didn&amp;rsquo;t know 
              what was happening. All of a sudden we saw the police, the riot 
              police, and the army surrounding our houses and people coming into 
              the town in trucks, in bulldozers. We went into our houses to watch 
              what was happening and they began to raze the town, to raze the 
              houses. And we were shocked, we didn&amp;rsquo;t believe that the mine 
              could be doing this.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   
    
     Has anything been done to compensate the Tabaco community?&amp;nbsp;
    
   
  
 
 
  
   When our delegation was there in November 2006, we interviewed 61 
              heads of households from families displaced from Tabaco, all living 
              under squalid conditions in the nearby town of Albania. We heard 
              the same story again and again. We are peasants, we are farmers, 
              people told us. We used to be productive people, we used to support 
              ourselves and our families. We were not rich, but we worked our 
              land and we provided our children with what they needed. Since the 
              company took our town and our land, there is nothing for us to do. 
              There is no work.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   In May 2002 the Colombian Supreme Court ruled that the people displaced 
              from Tabaco must be relocated in such a way as to be able to reconstruct 
              their community&amp;mdash; meaning that they needed land to farm and 
              the public infrastructure that had been destroyed. They are still 
              waiting for this decision to be enforced. One resident told us, 
              &amp;ldquo;We have exhausted all of the possibilities in Guajira, in 
              all of Colombia. We&amp;rsquo;ve gone to the courts, but they won&amp;rsquo;t 
              help us because the mine has so much power.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   The company claims that they followed a process of individual negotiations, 
              offering people money to give up their houses and land. When we 
              met with company officials in August 2006, they told us that only 
              eight families had refused to sell and that they were still making 
              offers to these eight.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Tabaco&amp;rsquo;s residents described these &amp;ldquo;negotiations&amp;rdquo; 
              to us. They told us that starting in 1997 the company began to make 
              people offers to turn over the title of their land, but promised 
              that they would be able to continue to farm on it. That the company 
              needed the titles for legal protection, but they would never actually 
              use the land. A lot of people did &amp;ldquo;sell&amp;rdquo; because they 
              thought they were selling only the title, not the right to use the 
              land.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Then around 2000 the &amp;ldquo;negotiations&amp;rdquo; started getting more 
              coercive. The company threatened people that if they did not sell, 
              their land would be expropriated and they would get nothing in return. 
              The government began cutting off services to the town&amp;mdash;the health 
              center, the school. The priest sold the church that the people themselves 
              had built. So more people agreed to sell.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Some people from Tabaco have been forced to leave the region altogether. 
              But the people who remain are organized. Tabaco in Resistance has 
              a very clear set of demands: they want to be recognized as a community, 
              for the company to negotiate collectively with their representatives, 
              and to be collectively relocated and compensated for their losses. 
              They want to achieve a settlement that will allow them to reconstruct 
              the social and economic fabric of their community.&amp;nbsp;
  
 


 
  
   
    
     How is the Cerrejon company responding to these demands?&amp;nbsp;
    
   
  
 
 
  
   We met with Cerrejon officials twice in 2006. In August our delegation 
              met with a group of about 15 officials from different departments 
              of the operation. In November we met with the president of the company, 
              Leon Teicher. Interestingly, Teicher and other officials acknowledged 
              that &amp;ldquo;mistakes were made&amp;rdquo; in Tabaca and that they want 
              to avoid such mistakes in the future. Clearly, they are unhappy 
              about the international scrutiny of their human rights practices. 
              They say they are willing to negotiate with three of the other villages 
              currently in the path of mine expansion. But they refuse to negotiate 
              with the people displaced from Tabaco or with those from any of 
              the other communities affected by their operations.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   
    
     What is being done to apply international pressure?&amp;nbsp;
    
   
  
 
 
  
   We are working internationally on many different fronts. We have 
              people in Australia, England, and Switzerland who have attended 
              the owning companies&amp;rsquo; shareholders meetings to bring the issues 
              of the communities into public light there. We have sponsored tours 
              by members of the affected communities in all of these countries, 
              as well as in the U.S. and Canada, where we receive a lot of the 
              coal. In Salem, Massachusetts, where I live, and where our power 
              plant imports coal from Colombia, the city council, the mayor, our 
              state representative, and our congressional representative have 
              all written letters to the mine asking it to recognize Tabaco&amp;rsquo;s 
              right to relocation. We&amp;rsquo;ve also met with power plants in Salem, 
              Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. New Brunswick Power has also written 
              to the mine urging it to negotiate with displaced Tabaco residents. 
              Dominion Energy, the owner of our plant, made a somewhat vaguer 
              statement calling for a &amp;ldquo;just resolution&amp;rdquo; of the issues.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   In Denmark and Holland two major importers have suspended contracts 
              with the U.S.-owned Drummond coal mine in Colombia because of the 
              murders of three union leaders there. This also sends a strong message 
              to other foreign-owned mines in Colombia that their human rights 
              practices are important to their clients.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   
    
     How does this relate to the anticorporate globalization movement?&amp;nbsp;
    
   
  
 
 
  
   These mines are a perfect example of corporate globalization. All 
              of these mining companies are multinational enterprises. In Colombia 
              they have been key players in implementing the neo-liberal agenda. 
              One piece of this was working with the IMF and World Bank to rewrite 
              Colombia&amp;rsquo;s mining code to grant more privileges and profits 
              to foreign companies. The Cerrejon mine used to be half-owned by 
              the Colombian government and it was privatized as part of this process.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Practically the only state presence in Guajira where the Cerrejon 
              mine is located is the army. Schools, roads, health care, and other 
              social services are almost nonexistent. Paramilitaries operate freely 
              and profits flow out freely. It&amp;rsquo;s a neo-liberal paradise.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Creating people-to-people ties, or &amp;ldquo;globalization from below,&amp;rdquo; 
              has been an important part of the anti-corporate globalization movement. 
              We need to be able to create a global movement to deal with the 
              power of these global companies. When we bring people from Nova 
              Scotia to see the mine that their coal comes from, or bring people 
              from Guajira to the power plants thousands of miles away that burn 
              coal from the mine that displaced their villages, we empower all 
              of us to work for a world that values people and their rights over 
              the profits of multinationals.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   
    
     In December 2006 Sintracarbon (the National Union of Coal Industry 
              Workers) entered into internationally monitored contract negotiations. 
              The union&amp;rsquo;s website explains that &amp;ldquo;violence against trade 
              unionists in Colombia is widespread and often increases during contract 
              negotiations. This time the union is taking the courageous stand 
              of calling on the mine to address the rights and needs of the Afro-Colombian 
              and indigenous communities in the region....&amp;rdquo; What has been 
              happening since?&amp;nbsp;
    
   
  
 
 
  
   As a result of our November delegation, we formed an International 
              Commision to monitor the contract negotiations that began in early 
              December. We&amp;rsquo;ve been receiving daily updates from the union 
              as to the progress of their negotiations, which we&amp;rsquo;ve been 
              translating and distributing to members of the Commission and also 
              posting on the union&amp;rsquo;s website that we made to support them 
              in the negotiations. The Commission includes representatives from 
              labor, social, and community organizations in the U.S., Canada, 
              England, and Switzerland.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   During our November delegation, we took Sintracarbon representatives 
              to visit the communities affected by the mine and they decided to 
              include a demand that the mine recognize the communities&amp;rsquo; rights 
              to collective negotiation, collective relocation, and reparations 
              in their bargaining proposal. This is something quite unprecedented. 
              Union members were appalled at the conditions in these communities. 
              It may seem surprising, but the union and the communities have been 
              separated by a huge gap: the mine won&amp;rsquo;t employ people from 
              the surrounding communities, partly because they want them to disappear 
              and partly because the mine employs people with a fairly high level 
              of education and technical training&amp;mdash;it&amp;rsquo;s an open pit mine 
              and most of the people who work there are mechanics or heavy machinery 
              operators. People from Afro-Colombian and indigenous villages have 
              no way to get the education and skills needed to do these jobs.&amp;nbsp;
  
 


 
 
 
  I 
              think unions in the United States are still struggling to figure 
              out how to engage with globalization. How can they deal with issues 
              of global justice and human and social rights at the same time that 
              they&amp;rsquo;re trying to protect their members&amp;rsquo; jobs and privileges? 
              The progressive unions that we&amp;rsquo;ve been working with in the 
              U.S. and Canada are extraordinarily impressed with how Sintracarbon 
              is going beyond workplace issues and working with the communities 
              that are resisting their own employer.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  
   Too often, we get overwhelmed by the enormous power of multinationals, 
              by how implacable the global system is. Here we have some of the 
              most powerless people in the world&amp;mdash;indigenous people with no 
              resources, no electricity, no water&amp;mdash;and some of the most vulnerable, 
              a union in a country with the highest rates of assassination and 
              repression against union activists in the world&amp;mdash;taking on some 
              of the most powerful multinationals in the world today. We have 
              a lot to learn from their example.
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
   
    
     Hans 
              Bennett is a Philadelphia-based photojournalist.&amp;nbsp;</description>
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