Archive for the ‘No One Is Illegal’ Category

January 2008: No One Is Illegal Radio

January 5, 2008

No One Is Illegal Radio reports about the frontline struggles for justice, dignity and self-determination by migrants, refugees and indigenous peoples. On this month‘s edition of No One Is Illegal Radio:

– Supporting migrants at the US-Mexico border: interviews with activists and reporters: Brenda Norrell (Tuscon, Arizona), Mike Wilson (member of the Tohono O’odham nation) and Jay Johnson-Castro (Del Rio, Texas)

AND

– “Smuggling, trafficking and open borders”; an interview with activist and scholar Nandita Sharma, author of “Home Economics: Nationalism and the Making of “Migrant Workers” in Canada”

MORE INFO and audio links HERE.

Violence Continues Against Afro-Colombian Communities

August 22, 2007

VIOLENCE CONTINUES AGAINST AFRO-COLOMBIAN COMMUNITIES

By David Parker

Bucaramanga, Colombia

August 21st, 2007

On June 21st, Luis Alberto, who I know better as ‘Janio’, was walking back to his home in the Humanitarian Zone of El Tesoro when he was assaulted by five illegally armed paramilitaries, who tied him up for half an hour, kicking him and threatening to kill him, accusing him and other community members of being guerrillas. Now, two weeks later I wonder if Janio is, like me, still recovering from the shock of the event. I was not shocked so much by the events of Janio’s story, as it is the same violent tactics practiced against many other members of the communities who protect their ancestral lands, traditional livelihoods and the unique tropical rainforest they live in from agro-industrial development. I was shocked because this time I was living in the community with him and for the first time, this was a victim I knew personally. Janio, one of the best soccer players in El Tesoro, who would make me sing Canadian songs; who steered our boat down the winding river of Caño Claro, tributary of the Curvaradó river; who held on to me as we were tossed around a top an intercity jeep on pot-holed roads; who made me play soccer with the community and wouldn’t take no for an answer.

 

The attack was preceded by a period of relative tranquility. One month earlier a group of 50 military passed by the barbed wire fence surrounding the resistance community, asking to enter and claiming three of the campesino men inside to be guerrillas – members of FARC. But the assault and threats to Janio’s life was nothing new for the communities of Afro-descendants, indigenous and mestizos that continue to struggle against State-backed violence and persecution; it was one more event in a 10 year history of bloody warfare, which has decided the fate of thousands of campesinos, and the worlds richest zone of biodiversity, the jungle of Bajo Atrato Chocoano.

 

FORCED DISPLACEMENT AND COMMUNITY RESISTANCE

 

In the recent history of this region of Colombia, the lower Atrato river basin in Urabá, Chocó has seen massive State repression at the hands of concerted military and paramilitary forces, as well as terror tactics from the FARC, a guerrilla group operating in the region. In October of 1996 and through 1997, a coordinated campaign of military and paramilitary forces known as ‘Operation Genesis’ forcibly displaced around 4,000 Afro-descendants, indigenous and mestizo civilian populations from territories collectively titled to Afro-Colombian communities. By land, sea and air, legal and illegal armed forces practiced torture, selective and collective assassination, massacre, disappearances, threats, theft and arson as a means to empty the dense and humid jungles inhabited by peaceable communities under the pretext of guerrilla activity in the area.

 

In 2000 and 2001, many community members, after suffering from fear, the loss of loved ones, hunger, and living in refugee camp conditions, decided to return to their land and create Peace Communities, only to find the development of agro-industrial mega-projects well underway. Urapalma S.A., the first of 12 private companies to operate in the region, with funding coming internationally from USAID (under the pretext of replacing illegal crops with sustainable agriculture and providing jobs for poor peasants) and nationally from FINAGRO and Fedepalma subsidies, had already sown 2000 hectares in the Curvaradó River basin with African Palm monocultres, with another 6000 hectares being cleared for the same purpose, all in the heart of the territories collectively owned by the communities of Curvaradó.

 

By way of violence, armed forces had ‘emptied’ the land of its traditional and ancestral inhabitants, although many fled the violence by retreating into the dense jungle, living without a home and without lighting a fire, for fear of both guerrilla forces in the region and the paramilitary and military forces. The violence had cleared the way for heavy machinery to deforest the land, destroying the soil structure and poisoning waterways, to plant greenhouse grown African Palm trees in symmetrical rows that would later be harvested for mass production of palm oil for the world market.

 

When new waves of incursions, assassinations, attacks and displacements occurred in 2001, the Afro-Colombian community councils of Jiguamiandó and Curvaradó, legally recognized governing bodies of the collective territories, created physically enclosed communities labelled as ‘Humanitarian Zones’ protected at first by Cautionary Measures to preserve the rights to life and physical integrity of community members, solicited by the Interamerican Commission of Human Rights on Nov. 7th 2002, and later by the Provisional Measures of protection of the communities decreed by the Interamerican Court of Human Rights on March 6th, 2003. According to the community members, no armed actors were allowed into the zones, since that would make them targets in the armed conflict.

 

The Humanitarian Zones were more than Peace Communities because rather than claiming to be neutral, the community councils resisted the presence of all armed actors and demanded justice as victims of massive displacement, continuing violent persecution and fear tactics. They demanded the right to govern the lands that had been stolen by State forces and developed by private enterprises. With accompaniment in the communities by national and international participants, the resistance was mounted on three fronts; to maintain a presence in the Humanitarian Zones and uphold the observance of the Right to Life and Integrity; to denounce the atrocities to the world community and generate pressure on Colombia’s government to observe the Protective Measures declared by the Interamerican Court; and to proceed judicially with cases of fraudulently acquired land titles for palm plantations and investigation into systematic violations of human rights.

 

Slowly, displaced community members have returned to their lands, and solidarity overcame fear. United by a common history, mestizo, indigenous and Afro-Colombians organized their new Humanitarian Zones as a non-violent resistance to State repression and capitalist development. The communities lived through years of threats, armed incursions into the zones, and continued assassination and disappearances, while direct solidarity and human rights organizations brought international attention to the crisis in Curvaradó and Jiguamiandó. The first Humanitarian Zones in the region were located on the Jiguamiandó River, but provided homes for community members of Curvaradó and Jiguamiandó, including the community council of both territories. Much of the Curvaradó river basin was already sown with African Palm monocultures and swarming with military, paramilitary, police and company employees. In 2006, the first Humanitarian Zone in Curvaradó was created in the midst of over 17,000 hectares (and growing) of palm plantations, by cutting down a a few hectares of palm trees and building the Humanitarian Zone of Andalucia. Since then, new Humanitarian Zones and Biodiversity Zones continue to be created in Curvaradó, including El Tesoro, created in October 2006.

 

ETHNIC AND CULTURAL MEMORY

 

Janio, his family and other familias living in El Tesoro and the other resistance communities of Curvaradó and Jiguamiandó are preserving vestiges of an ancient way of life in danger of extinction. Despite waves of colonization in Bajo Atrato, including attempts to develop a navegable waterway between the two oceans, and mining of gold, silver and other metals, The Atrato River and its tributaries have proved difficult for conquistadors, slave-traders and pirate voyages to colonize due to its difficult climate of dense jungle, torrential rains and labyrinthine rivers.

 

The river names of Jiguamiandó and Curvaradó were known by the Embera, Waunana and Awa peoples, whose ancient way of life, survival and existence, meshed with African rituals and ancestrality when former African slaves bought their freedom and moved to the jungles of Chocó and Bajo Atrato, in search of land, simplicity, and their own methods of development. In the 1980’s, the cultural exchange developed with the arrival of mestizos, fleeing the violence that had left them landless in agrarian struggles from Cordoba to Sucre and Antioquia. Politics, skin colour and mentalities integrated and juxtaposed, but ultimately found harmony in principles of life and territory.

 

In the 1990’s, the territories became the location and or route of passage for guerrillas of the Popular Liberation Army, EPL; later for the National Liberation Army, ELN, and finally for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC EP, who still exist there today. But the cruel military and covert paramilitary strategies of Brigade XVII of the National Army known as Operation Genesis, was directed not at the guerrillas but at the Afro-descendant, indigenous and mestizo civilian populations.

 

STOLEN LAND FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

 

Jiguamiandó and Curvaradó remained, into the 1990’s, one of the last of the unplucked gems of the Americas, having successfully resisted repeated attempts of colonization. The capitalist economic model was eventually imposed on the land and people beginning with Operation Genesis in 1996-97. The war against the civilian communities of Curvaradó and Jiguamiandó, begun in ’96, has continued on many fronts; military, judicial, political, psychological and technological. The objective, not only to appropriate the land from the communities, has also been to destroy cultural constructions and ancestral collective mentalities.

 

The massive displacements, preceded by chains of threats, assassinations, tortures, pillages and hostage-taking, reveal a comprehensive plan of expropriation of territory, under the pretext of controlling insurgent groups, but they cannot hide the aggression against native communities and simultaneous protection of corporations who have taken these territories. The clear motive of the State-led violence, rather than quelling armed resistance, was targeting peasant communities in order to use lands for agro-industrial projects as part of an imposed economic development model.

 

PLAN COLOMBIA AND IMPUNITY

 

The palm oil industry currently developing in Bajo Atrato Chocano now with 27,000 hectares of palm plantation in the Cuenca of Curvaradó operated and owned by 12 corporations, figures prominently in government and State policy of economic development under the administration of President Álvaro Uribe Vélez. Palm oil has traditionally been a highly profitable export used in foods and hygiene products, but the use of palm oil to make biodiesel and the expanding demand for biodiesel in the North as a ‘green’ energy has led Uribe to guarantee an export market of palm oil for biodiesel. He has pledged to increase palm plantation hectares from 175,000 in 2005 to 6 million, as part of State policy recognized in the U.S.-Colombian Free Trade Agreement and the U.S. backed Plan Colombia.

 

The financial profiteers of palm oil production are the same for palm plantations in Colombia, Indonesia and Malaysia, three of the worlds biggest exporters; a handful of elite locals from each respective region and transnational corporations such as Unilever, Procter and Gamble, Henkel, Cognis and Cargill. In Colombia, Law 138 of 1994 sanctions palm oil production, by creating the “Cuota de Fomento Palmero” to financially subsidize palm oil cultivators and encourage development, administered by Fedepalma. Meanwhile, Plan Colombia and the State strategy of Democratic Security has oriented the process of “paramilitary remobilization”, a way of legalizing the history of paramilitary violence and bringing them impunity. Institutional impunity was officially created through Law 975 of 2005: “Law of Justice and Peace”, which demobilizes paramilitaries, leaving criminals unpunished, instead linking them as ‘employees’ to the newly created agro-industrial projects being developed on land stolen through forced displacement. One example is the model of associative enterprises currently employed in agro-industrial projects such as cocoa, lumber, rubber and palm oil. Demobilized paramilitaries, displaced peasants and peasants work with a corporate investor interested in starting a business who “acts as a tutor”. In Urabá, for the paramilitaries who do not demobilize, there continues to exist work opportunities, uniting forces with the military to control local populations in the municipalities of Riosucio, Barranquillita, Belén de Bajirá, Pavarandó and Mutatá.

 

There are no guarantees of protection of the rights of victims, nor guarantees of returning properties and lands to their rightful owners. Furthermore, the palm plantations themselves are ‘legalized’ through fraudulent mechanisms, including purchasing land titles from landowners who could not have sold the land because they are deceased; drastically augmenting the size of land purchases on paper form 30 to 6000 hectares; inventing fake landowners, or buying land from people who don’t own any land. To secure international funding from USAID, the palm companies claim they are providing work opportunities for Afro-Colombians by substitution illicit crops (coca and marijuana) with a profitable legal alternative, a fraudulent lie puppeted even by President Uribe Vélez.

 

The Colombian State judicial apparatus only aggravates and confuses the problem, by ignoring the many pending investigations and not recognizing the systematic nature of the human rights violations, instead treating each case individually and unconnected. In effect, different levels of State and government provide guarantees for private enterprise, while persecuting civilians and violating human rights; all of which is legislated by transnational capital.

 

RESISTANCE FOR LIFE, LAND AND DIGNITY

 

The communities of Curvaradó and Jiguamiandó have faced remarkable adversity, from massacres and forced displacement to the appropriation of their land and impunity for the criminals, yet have shown incredible resilience. The crimes perpetrated are of such a systematic nature that they can only be understood as crimes against humanity. It has led to a profound deterioration of ethnic and cultural identity. Furthermore, the crimes, committed in a very fragile ecosystem with the world’s highest levels of biodiversity and rainfall, have created irreversible deterioration of the environment. These atrocities have been done in order to install an exclusionary development model, a capitalist model fundamentally opposed to the ethnic communities’ values of life, natural rhythms and sacred relationships to the environment, human life and the eternal.

 

A testament to the resilience of their traditional way of life has been their ability to create an authentic democracy in the midst of armed conflict. Resistance has been their only option for the reconstruction of truly democratic self-determination. Peace Communities turned into Humanitarian Zones: communities chose, rather than to be neutral, to demand justice. Their method of organizing is to construct concrete guarantees for their life, liberty of thought and land. Internal and international mechanisms of protection and justice are in place to preserve a community, a way of life, an ecosystem and a principle of basic human value and dignity.

 

http://www.pasc.ca

No One Is Illegal: News, Events and Analysis (January 15-21, 2007)

January 20, 2007

A weekly compilation of news, events and analysis linked HERE.

Et, en français ICI.

No One Is Illegal Radio — January 2007

January 20, 2007

On this month’s show: the re-opening of the Confederacy Council at Six Nations; the hunger strike at Guantanamo North; a message from Amir Hodhod in Jersey City.

Show is linked at radio4all.net

Also linked off the No One Is Illegal-Montreal news blog HERE

Next show on Off the Hour, Tuesday, February 13 from 5-6pm.

No One Is Illegal Radio — 2006 Archives

January 5, 2007

The No One Is Illegal-Montreal collective produces a monthly radio show which airs on CKUT community radio.

–> An archive of No One Is Illegal Radio’s 2006 shows is available at:
http://nooneisillegal-montreal.blogspot.com/2007/01/no-one-is-illegal-radio-2006-archive.html

Our 2006 shows include the voices of:
- Latifa Charkaoui: mother of Adil Charkaoui, one of the Secret Trial Five;
- Arnoldo Garcia: organizer with the National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights in Oakland, California;
- Kahehti:io: Mohawk youth activist from Kahnawake, arrested at the Land Reclamation at Six Nations;
- Sherene Razack, author of “Looking White People in the Eye,” and a witness at the People’s Commission into Immigration “Security” Measures;
- Hassan Almrei: secret trial detainee at Guantanamo North Prison, detained without trial since 2001;
- Karen Coq: member of No One Is Illegal-Kingston, active in opposing the Guantanamo North prison;
- Amir Hodhod: a member of Solidarity Across Borders who marched to Ottawa from Montreal in June 2005, and is fighting a pending deportation from Canada;
- Hazel Hill: spokesperson for the Six Nations Land Reclamation;
- Kahentinehta: of Mohawk Nation News and a defender of Mohawk territory during the Oka Crisis of 1990;
- Roberta Keesick: elder, trapper and activist from the Grassy Narrows indigenous territory in Northwestern Ontario; the blockade against logging at Grassy Narrows is the longest blockade in Canadian history;
- Arash Aslani: refugee from Iran, and former 10-month detainee at the Laval Detention Center near Montreal;
- Teresa Hayter: author of “Open Borders” and organizer with the Campaign to Close Campsfield Detention Center in England;
- Aarti Shahani: anti-deportations and anti-detentions activist with Families for Freedom in New York City;
- Rasha Moumneh, of the Helem LGBT group in Beirut, Lebanon;
- Nay: activist with Aswat, a queer justice group in Palestine;
- Rafeef Ziadah: the Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid in Toronto;
- Ashanti Alston Omowali: anarchist activist, former political prisoner, and member of the Black Panther Party;
- Biju Mathew: organizer with the New York Taxi Worker’s Alliance;
- Trudy Miller: mother of indigenous Six Nations political prisoner Trevor Miller;
- Angel Smith: cousin of Trevor Miller;
- Khadija Bennis: twin sister of Mohamed Anas Bennis, killed by the Montreal police.

–> An archive of No One Is Illegal Radio’s 2006 shows is available at:
http://nooneisillegal-montreal.blogspot.com/2007/01/no-one-is-illegal-radio-2006-archive.html

You can tune to No One Is Illegal Radio on the 2nd Tuesday of every month, from 5-6pm, as part of the Open Conspiracy for Social Change on “Off The Hour.” Our upcoming 2007 shows will be on January 9, February 13, March 13, April 10 …

–> You can listen live in the MONTREAL-area at 90.3FM.

–> You can listen ANYWHERE online at http://www.ckut.ca

–> Or, contact noii-montreal@resist.ca to get regular updates about the organizing of No One Is Illegal-Montreal, including audio links to our upcoming shows.

No One Is Illegal-Montreal is part of a worldwide movement of resistance, fighting for justice and dignity, and the right to self-determination for migrants, refugees and indigenous people. Our campaign is in public confrontation with the Canadian state, denouncing and taking action to combat racial profiling, police brutality, detentions and deportations, exploitation and wage-slave conditions, as well as opposing the displacement and genocide of indigenous peoples on Turtle Island.

INFO:
514-848-7583 — noii-montreal@resist.ca

http://nooneisillegal-montreal.blogspot.com

No One Is Illegal Radio (December 2006) :: Free Trevor Miller! Justice for Mohamed Anas Bennis!

December 13, 2006

No One Is Illegal-Montreal Radio
part of CKUT’s Open Conspiracy for Social Change

::::::::::
Free Trevor Miller! ::: political prisoner from Six Nations
Justice for Mohamed Anas Bennis! ::: Killed by the Montreal police
::::::::::

Listen to our December 2006 show online at:
–> http://www.radio4all.net/proginfo.php?id=20889

MONTREAL, December 12, 2006 — Yesterday, TREVOR MILLER, 31, of Six Nations was again denied release at a bail review hearing. He has been in custody since August, for his participation in the Land Reclamation on the Grand River Territory in Ontario. Trevor Miller is an indigenous political prisoner who remains steadfast in his refusal to accept the authority of colonial Canadian courts, and demands to be released to his own people.

Meanwhile, December 1, 2006 marked the first anniversary of the police killing of MOHAMED ANAS BENNIS, 25, at the corner of Cote-des-Neiges and Kent in Montreal. Despite strong community mobilization, the Bennis family has not been provided any information about why Mohamed Anas was shot and killed outside a mosque, and many in the community speculate about a racially motivated police killing that is being covered-up.

On this month’s edition of No One Is Illegal Radio, we hear directly from the voices of supporters fighting against injustice on behalf of their family members.

–> We speak with both TRUDY MILLER and ANGEL SMITH, mother and cousin of indigenous political prisoner Trevor Miller.

Trevor has been in preventive custody for more than four months, since August when he was arrested at a blockade at Grassy Narrows. Trevor is being charged in relation to incidents at the Six Nation Land Reclamation, when he along with others defended the site against a US border patrol/ATF vehicle that appeared on the site.

Trevor has been referred to as the “Forgotten Warrior” because his situation was not publicly known for several months, until a letter he wrote his mother was published in a local Six Nations newspaper.

In these interviews, Trudy and Angel speak about Trevor’s situation, as well as providing an analysis of the broader issues concerning indigenous sovereignty, the Great Law and the two-row wampum, the Haldimand Tract treaty, as well as the continued resistance of the women and men of Six Nations.

–> We also speak with KHADIJA BENNIS, the twin sister of Mohamed Anas Bennis who was killed by Montreal police last December 2005.

Mohamed Anas Bennis left a neighbourhood mosque, just minutes from his home, after early morning prayers on December 1, 2005. He was shot by Montreal police who were assisting Surete du Quebec investigators carrying out a search warrant in a fraud case nearby, totally unrelated to Bennis. Still, inexplicably, Bennis is alleged to have tried to stab a cop and was shot twice and killed. Bennis’ family is adamant that the allegations against Mohamed are ludicrous. In the words of one sister: “The idea of Mohamed Anas walking around with a kitchen knife as he left mosque on the morning on December 1, there is no way we’re going to swallow a story like that. We’d do better to believe in Santa Claus!”

Now more than one-year after the killing, the death of Mohamed Anas Bennis remains shrouded in mystery. The police and outside prosecutor have provided no written report to corroborate any of the claims the police have made. The special prosecutor has absolved the police of any responsibility for the killing, saying they acted in self-defense. There is still no independent proof that the police version of events is true. Even video footage from a nearby building has not been handed over, and might have even been destroyed. The circumstances surrounding the killing of Mohamed Anas Bennis have been buried, and the family treated with arrogance and disrespect.

The mystery and secrecy surrounding this case reinforces the belief by many in the Montreal community that Mohamed Anas Bennis was killed by police in a case of racial profiling.

Listen to our December 2006 show online at:
–> http://www.radio4all.net/proginfo.php?id=20889

::: No One Is Illegal Radio December 2006 Interview Excerpts :::

“They’re making an example out of [Trevor]. They’re doing him an injustice. … I want it out there: I’m very proud of my son.” — Trudy Miller (mother of Trevor Miller, indigenous political prisoner).

“[O]ur people in this day and age are more educated, we understand your system that much more. We’re still being who we are as Onkwehonweh people. And this time around that education is going to help enforce our sovereignty. And ya, they have our young warrior, but [he's] what you would call a political prisoner.” — Angel Smith (Mohawk activist and cousin of Trevor Miller).

“We have the feeling that we’re being lied to and something is being hidden from us … It’s hard to believe that willingly the system will give us the truth. We’re being insulted and our intelligence is being insulted. There was an injustice and we’re looking for justice.” — Khadija Bennis (twin sister of Mohamed Anas Bennis who was killed by Montreal police).

–> For more information about SIX NATIONS, please consult the resource site by Autonomy and Solidarity for background and more links: http://auto_sol.tao.ca/node/view/2012

–> For information about the MOHAMED ANAS BENNIS case, please refer to this backgrounder by the Collective Opposed to Police Brutality in Montreal:
http://www.cmaq.net/en/node/26143?PHPSESSID=8fac57736293fa2aae7d39b4d135ed95

–> PHOTOS from the recent vigils for Mohamed Anas Bennis (December 1, 2006) are available at: http://gallery.cmaq.net/bennisvigils

–> LISTEN to our December 2006 show online at: http://www.radio4all.net/proginfo.php?id=20889

–> To GET INVOLVED with Six Nations political prisoner support work, or in support of justice for the Bennis family in the Montreal-area, please contact No One Is Illegal-Montreal at 514-848-7583 or noii-montreal@resist.ca

—–
No One Is Illegal Radio is a monthly news and current affairs show on CKUT community radio in Montreal, produced and hosted by members of the No One Is Illegal collective.

No One Is Illegal-Montreal is part of a worldwide movement of resistance, fighting for justice and dignity, and the right to self-determination for migrants, refugees and indigenous people. Our campaign is in public confrontation with the Canadian state, denouncing and taking action to combat racial profiling, police brutality, detentions and deportations, exploitation and wage-slave conditions, as well as opposing the displacement and genocide of indigenous peoples on Turtle Island.

514-848-7583 — noii-montreal@resist.cawww.ckut.ca
[No One Is Illegal-Montreal website will be on the net soon!]

–> The next No One Is Illegal-Montreal Radio show will be on the air live on Tuesday, January 9, 2007 from 5-6pm. Listen online at www.ckut.ca, or in Montreal tune-in at 90.3fm. Contact us for links to our previous shows!


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