From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. bending rules on Colombia terror?
Several lawmakers say multinationals that aid
violent groups in return for protection are not being prosecuted.
By Josh Meyer
Times Staff Writer
July 22, 2007
WASHINGTON — For more than a decade, leftist guerrilla and right-wing
paramilitary groups in Colombia have kidnapped or killed civilians,
trade union leaders, police and soldiers by the hundreds and profited
by shipping cocaine and heroin to the United States.
In that time, several American multinational corporations have been
accused of essentially underwriting those criminal activities — in
violation of U.S. law — by providing cash, vehicles and other financial
assistance as insurance against attacks on their employees and
facilities in the South American nation.
But only one such company — Chiquita Brands International Inc. — has
been charged criminally in the United States. Now, a showdown is
looming that pits some members of Congress against the Justice
Department and the multinationals — including an American coal-mining
company and Coca-Cola bottlers.
The lawmakers say that, in the cases of U.S. corporations in Colombia,
the Justice Department has failed to adequately enforce U.S. laws that
make it a crime to knowingly provide material support or resources to a
foreign terrorist organization — and they have opened their own
investigation.
Rep. Bill Delahunt (D-Mass.), who is leading the effort, has questioned
whether the Bush administration is putting the interests of U.S.
conglomerates ahead of its counter-terrorism agenda.
Even the plea agreement reached with Chiquita in March — in which it
acknowledged making the illegal payments — has been criticized as far
too lenient by many outside legal experts and some high-ranking Justice
Department prosecutors.
"I think they've escaped any kind of appropriate sanctions," Delahunt
said in an interview last week.
"We will take a good, hard look at how American multinationals operate
around the world, using Colombia as a model," said Delahunt, chairman
of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on International
Organizations, Human Rights and Oversight. "It really deserves an
exhaustive effort to examine where we need legislation and if there are
gaps in our criminal code that allow U.S. corporations to aid or abet
violence in other countries that erode our credibility and our moral
standing in the world."
The Bush administration has declared that a hallmark of its
counter-terrorism policy is to go after the financiers of terrorism
just as aggressively as the terrorists themselves — anywhere in the
world. But the situation in Colombia underscores the difficulty in
prosecuting such goals when it conflicts with American economic
interests abroad and trade relations with friendly governments. Making
the matter particularly sensitive, the U.S. is in the midst of
negotiating a free-trade agreement with Colombia, and sends it billions
annually in military and other aid.
"Do our economic interests trump the war on terror? Are we making
trade-offs?" Delahunt asked. "If we are, at the very least the public
should know about it."
Lance Compa, an international trade specialist at Cornell University's
School of Industrial and Labor Relations, acknowledged that there were
many competing priorities in Colombia.
"But the general proposition that gross human rights violations should
be weighed against trade policy and foreign policy is a mistake," Compa
said. "The paramilitaries have infiltrated the highest levels of the
[Colombian] government, and the Bush administration is looking the
other way.
"It makes it all the more incumbent on U.S. policymakers to put a stop
to any corporate dealings with paramilitary death squads."
Dealings outlawed
The right-wing United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, or AUC,
initially began as a security force in response to leftist atrocities,
but it quickly transformed in the 1990s into a brutal organization with
ties to Colombia's military, political and business establishment. The
State Department designated the AUC a terrorist organization in 2001,
making it a crime to provide the group with financial or other support.
Financial dealings with the paramilitaries have also been outlawed
under a federal "drug kingpin" statute, because such groups are
believed to supply 90% of the cocaine and 50% of the heroin consumed in
the U.S.
For more than four years, lawmakers have been requesting information
from the Justice Department about whether it is investigating "credible
allegations" against some of the American firms, including some that
were named in detailed civil lawsuits and forwarded to prosecutors,
according to letters sent to Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales and his
predecessor, John Ashcroft.
The lawmakers are particularly concerned about claims that the Drummond
Co. coal-mining operations paid paramilitaries from the AUC to kill
three trade union leaders who were trying to organize workers at its
coal mines in 2001. Drummond has been accused in a civil lawsuit first
filed in 2002 of using the AUC as a de facto security force that
intimidated employees to keep them from unionizing and demanding higher
wages.
Drummond has strenuously denied the claims and is fighting them in a
civil trial that began this month.
In a letter to Ashcroft on June 25, 2003, four lawmakers on House
foreign affairs oversight committees urged thorough investigations of
the Drummond case and allegations against two U.S.-owned Coca-Cola
bottling firms in Colombia that are also accused in lawsuits of
colluding with the paramilitaries. The bottlers, which are independent
of the Atlanta-based beverage giant, have denied any wrongdoing.
Nearly a year later, Assistant Atty. Gen. William E. Moschella sent a
four-paragraph response that said: "We can assure you that this matter
is being carefully reviewed." Moschella said the Justice Department
could not comment on any case until there were public filings.
The lawmakers said they had been unable to get even basic information
about whether an investigation was underway.
A lower priority?
Two senior Justice Department officials acknowledged that violent
Colombian groups, particularly the AUC, were not as high a priority as
Islamist jihad groups because they had not attacked American interests
such as embassies.
But critics say that the Colombian groups have killed and kidnapped
more people than Al Qaeda and that the Justice Department's selective
enforcement of U.S. laws opens it up to charges of having double
standards in the war on terrorism.
The Justice Department says it has aggressively pursued corporate
financiers of terrorism, in Colombia and elsewhere.
"The notion that the Justice Department is somehow putting the
interests of U.S. companies ahead of its national security priorities
is baseless," said spokesman Dean Boyd. "The Justice Department takes
seriously any and all allegations about U.S. persons or entities that
may have engaged in transactions with specially designated terrorist
organizations."
The senior Justice Department officials confirmed that they had
launched a probe of Drummond at least several years ago, and that they
had looked at other U.S. firms as well. "We were trying to look into
any allegation there was of any company doing what Chiquita was doing,"
one said of the Drummond allegations. "I can't say we pursued every one
of them."
Kenneth L. Wainstein, assistant attorney general for national security,
said he could not discuss ongoing federal actions.
The lawmakers' concerns intensified after Chiquita reached a plea
agreement with the Justice Department in March, in which it admitted
having paid the AUC at least $1.7 million between 1997 and 2004, and
the left-wing Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, before
that. Chiquita said it did so to protect its workers, contending that
the guerrilla and paramilitary groups attacked corporations that
refused.
Colombia's chief prosecutor, Mario Iguaran, has accused Chiquita and
the AUC of cultivating "a criminal relationship" based on "money and
arms and, in exchange, the bloody pacification of Uraba," the region
where the Cincinnati-based firm's banana plantations were based until
it sold them in 2004.
In May, six congressmen wrote a follow-up letter to Gonzales, asking
whether the Justice Department had investigated their "grave concerns"
that other companies, particularly Drummond, might be engaging in
similar activity. The lawmakers said that Iguaran had launched a
criminal investigation of Drummond and that though the allegations were
unproved, they were "sufficiently credible" for the Justice Department
to launch criminal proceedings of its own.
"If no such probe has begun, we strongly urge that one be started
immediately," wrote Reps. Delahunt, Tom Lantos (D-Burlingame), Howard
L. Berman (D-Valley Village), George Miller (D-Martinez), Eliot L.
Engel (D-N.Y.) and Christopher H. Smith (R-N.J.).
No response
The Justice Department has not responded to that letter, the
lawmakers say.
"In the wake of 9/11, it is shocking to me that allegations of payments
to terrorist groups have not been aggressively investigated and
prosecuted by the Justice Department," Engel said at a June 28
congressional hearing on the issue, the first of what the lawmakers
have pledged will be many.
"I can only imagine the force and speed with which the entire
prosecutorial force of the United States government would come down on
a company alleged to have assisted Al Qaeda or Hezbollah," Engel added.
The congressmen, all top members of foreign affairs panels, vow to haul
in top officials from Drummond, Chiquita and other companies (which
they would not name) that have done business in Colombia to testify
under oath.
At the June congressional hearing, a former Colombian military captain
turned AUC soldier; a human rights worker; and a union leader testified
that numerous U.S. corporations besides Chiquita and Drummond had been
routinely paying off violent groups in Colombia.
This spring, former AUC leader Salvatore Mancuso and group spokesman
Ivan Duque alleged that the payoffs were pervasive and long-standing,
involving multinational fruit companies such as Fresh Del Monte Produce
Inc. and Dole Food Co., as well as oil conglomerates and other firms.
Del Monte and Dole have denied the allegations.
Many more AUC commanders intend to begin speaking publicly about the
financing of their reign of terror "by the banana industry, some coal
companies, big national businesses," Duque said in a published
interview.
"Those who broke the law must face the consequences, just as we are."
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times