The United States isn’t about to tell people exactly how it’s spending Plan Colombia money, money that is said to fight against drug traffickers and terrorists in Alvaro Uribe’s country. There is some concern that brand spanking new military units are targeting civilian areas and violating human rights.
The Colombian Army’s brand-new 23rd Mobile Brigade, pursuing National Liberation Army (ELN) rebels, pounded a school and nearby home on Monday, February 2 with bombs, rockets and machine-gun fire in the hamlet of La Esperanza, in San Calixto municipality, Norte de Santander department.
The Nueva Esperanza school was hit dozens of times, with many bullets falling inside classrooms that, thankfully, were empty of students, owing to a lack of teachers. One young civilian resident was hurt, and bullets also fell on a house nearby, a mortar striking within thirty feet. The soldiers then camped in the homes and on the land of La Esperanza residents – a violation of International Humanitarian Law and Protocol II of the Geneva Conventions, as is the targeting and destruction of a civilian institution. (Article 48 of Geneva Conventions Protocol I requires the armed forces to only carry out operations against military targets, not civilian establishments.) They also stole personal property of local leaders, copies of parents’ identity documents and over $1,000 US in school and community property.
8:34 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · mexico|Politics · Comments Off
11 Oct 2007
Yesterday I wrote about how well Plan Colombia has worked out for the people there. Not surprisingly, the U.S. wants to spread its program to other Latin American nations. Next stop, Mexico.
The US intends to supply Mexico with a $1bn aid package to help combat an increasingly costly and violent war against drugs, according to a top Mexican diplomat.
The agreement, which some experts have dubbed ”Plan Mexico” after the controversial multi-billion-dollar anti-narcotics package the US established with Colombia in 2000, would be spread out over two years and include the supply of intelligence, training and equipment such as helicopters and boats.
Plan Mexico is said to differ from Plan Colombia in that no US troops would be allowed to operate on Mexican soil.
Via / The Financial Times
9:14 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Colombia|Controversia|Latin America · 5 Comments
10 Oct 2007
Plan Colombia and the intervention of the U.S. military in that South American nation brings more than just the expected violence between rival paramilitary and leftist groups. It brings the rape of local children. According to a Colombian newspaper report two members of the US military in Colombia, Michael J. Cohen and Cesar Ruiz, assigned under Plan Colombia to the military base of Tolemaida, are reported to have enticed a 12 year-old Colombian girl to go with them on August 25, 2007, and brought her into the base, where they fondled and raped her for four hours.
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