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WSWS : News
& Analysis : South
& Central America
Colombian union leader assassinated as national strike intensifies
By Cory Johnson
24 October, 1998
Union leaders representing 650,000 striking public sector employees
walked out of talks with Colombian government officials October
20 after a lone gunman suspected of right-wing paramilitary ties
assassinated a leader of one of the labor federations involved
in the two-week old wildcat strike.
Jorge Ortega, vice president of the Stalinist-led Unified Workers'
Central (CUT), was shot six times in the face, chest and stomach
on the steps outside his apartment in a working class neighborhood
of the capital city, Bogota.
The murder came after several days of intensified picket line
confrontations in which government forces have unleashed teargas
and water cannon against strikers, and as a poll revealed Colombian
President Andres Pastrana's approval rating plunged 33 percent.
Pastrana placed responsibility for the death on a "dark force
trying to sow chaos" and offered a $63,000 reward for the
murderer. Port workers and other private sector workers of CUT
voted to stage 24-hour work stoppages in protest of the killing.
Ortega reported having been followed for days by suspected
right-wing elements. Two weeks ago his apartment was ransacked
without anything being stolen. He was in the process of requesting
government protection when he was gunned down. The government
insisted that Ortega accept secret police bodyguards while the
union leader was demanding that the government hire and train
bodyguards from a list of individuals provided by the union.
It is a well-known fact that there is collusion between the
paramilitary squads and the government security forces. Wilson
Borja, head of the main public sector workers' union FENALTRASE,
declared of Ortega's murder, "This was the paramilitaries
or maybe somebody from the government." In the last decade
alone 35,000 people have been killed by Colombian death squads.
Ortega's union, CUT, during the same period has had 2,500 of its
members killed.
A recent Human Rights Watch report details the complicity of
the government, as well as the US military, with the death squads.
It catalogs one massacre in the rural town of Mapiripan in July
1997, when paramilitary squads landed an airport shared by the
US military, and then passed unimpeded through several government
checkpoints to torture and kill 14 peasants accused of organizing
protests against the aerial spraying of drug crops. Two men were
decapitated, their heads kicked like soccer balls down the street,
while another was hanged and quartered. US troops are allegedly
fighting narcotics trafficking but have worked with the government
to suppress a guerilla insurgency.
On the same day as Ortega's assassination violence broke out
in other sectors of the country. A right-wing death squad murdered
a mayor near the northwestern town of Anori, the eleventh mayor
to be gunned down this year. In the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta
mountain range of northern Colombia gunmen kidnapped 19 investigators
from the Chief Prosecutor's Department. The officials had been
dispatched to investigate the massacre of at least 17 peasants
by paramilitary forces.
The strike by public sector workers was launched to protest
Pastrana's austerity program which aims to further impoverish
the Colombian workers and peasantry while appeasing international
financial interests. The same day that violence erupted across
the country, the Colombian Congress approved a national budget
of which 32.6 percent goes towards servicing the country's debt.
The US government, which backs Pastrana's measures, has renewed
military aid to the country after severely cutting it back in
1994, following the exposure of numerous human rights violations
by the Colombian government.
See also:
Mass
strikes in Colombia hit austerity demands
[17 October 1998]
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