Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2007
This article examines how globalization and violence have shaped workers' organizations in the Urabá banana zone in northern Colombia from the 1960s to the present. Early unions found allies in leftist political and guerilla organizations. The banana growers relied on the neoliberal state and rightist paramilitaries to unleash an extraordinary wave of violence to crush the leftist unions. They also wooed the right within the unions by pleading a set of common interests in reforming the global banana trade to the benefit of Colombian producers. By the 1990s, a newly right-dominated union in Urabá proved adept at labor-management collaboration in the interest of their joint regional stake in the industry, but it also promoted international labor unity aimed at pressuring banana transnationals to accept minimum labor standards.
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46. Botero, Urabá, 144, 146. Colombia's third major guerrilla group, the Cuban-inspired National Liberation Army (ELN), did not establish a presence in Urabá.
47. Romero, “Los trabajadores bananeros,” 7. The EPL's 1980 Congress concluded that “armed struggle should not be confined to marginal and agrarian zones, but rather linked decisively to the industrial and agricultural proletariat” (Botero, Urabá, 172). The EPL worked to recruit Sintagro leaders, like Argemiro and Hernán Correa. Argemiro joined the EPL in 1983. Villarraga and Plazas, Para reconstruir los sueños, 205.
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56. Pearce, Inside the Labyrinth, 253, Comisión Andina, Informes regionales, 58.
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71. Comisión Verificadora, “Informe,” 17.
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73. Comisión Andina, Informes regionales, 40.
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82. Villarraga and Plazas, Para reconstruir los sueños, 390–392.
83. Human Rights Watch, Guerra sin cuartel, Part V, Part IV; Comisión Andina, Informes regionales, 119.
84. “Social Pact,” Latin America Weekly Report 91–16, May 2, 1991.
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86. Ramírez Tobón, Urabá, 64.
87. Villarraga and Plazas, Para reconstruir los sueños, 393.
88. Ibid., 458.
89. Ramírez Tobón, Urabá, 59–60.
90. Comisión Andina, Informes regionales, 62; Romero, “Los trabajadores bananeros,” 9–10.
91. Villarraga and Plazas, Para reconstruir los sueños, 393.
92. Ibid., 473.
93. Comisión Andina, Informes regionales, 109–110.
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96. Cited in Villarraga and Plazas, Para reconstruir los sueños, 486.
97. Comisión Verificadora, “Informe,” 34.
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100. Comisión Verificadora, “Informe,” 25; Comisión Andina, Informes regionales, 116.
101. Comisión Andina, Informes regionales, 123.
102. Ibid., 130.
103. Ibid., 133–34.
104. Romero, “Los trabajadores bananeros.”
105. Comisión Verificadora, “Informe,” 32.
106. John Otis, “Critics Question Chiquita's Claim that it was Forced to Pay Colombian Paramilitaries,” Houston Chronicle, April 2, 2007; “Bananas, Bungs and Bombs: How Chiquita's Payments to Terrorists Blew Up in its Face,” Lloyd's List, March 28, 2007.
107. Comisión Verificadora, “Informe,” 32.
108. Comisión Verificadora, “Informe,” 39. By the middle of 1995 some 100 demobilized EPL members had become DAS agents (Sandoval, Gloria Cuartas, 189).
109. Sandoval, Gloria Cuartas, 240–241.
110. Ibid., 241.
111. Romero, “Los trabajadores bananeros,” 11.
112. “Finalizó paro bananero en Urabá,” El País (Cali, Colombia), May 23, 2002: http://elpais-cali.terra.com.co/paisonline/notas.Mayo232002/bananeros.html.
113. UITA, “Huelga bananera en Urabá,” May 19, 2004: http://www.rel-uita.org/campanias/uraba-2004/articulos/huelga-uita.htm.
114. Emanuelsson, “Los mochacabezas.” The proreferendum declaration signed by Sintrainagro is reproduced on the Colombian government website. See CNE, “Organizaciones sindicales de Antioquia invitan a votar el referendo,” September 26, 2003: www.presidencia.gov.co/cne/2003/septiembre/26/19262003.htm.
115. Osvaldo Cuadrado Simanca and Luis Guillermo Peña Restrepo, “San José de Apartadó requiere de una solución integral,” press release, April 7, 2005: http://www.rel-uita.org/sindicatos/comunicado_sintrainagro-7-4-2005.htm. See also the February, 2005 press release categorically contradicting Gloria Cuartas's protest that the Army was responsible for the massacre: http://www.rel-uita.org/campanias/sintrainagro-2005/notas/comunicado_sintrainagro.htm.
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118. Lone Riisgaard, “The IUF/COLSIBA-Chiquita framework agreement: A case study” ILO Working Paper, Geneva, n.d. (2003 or 2004), 94: http://www.ilo.org/public/english/employment/multi/download/wp94.pdf. Interestingly, this study only evaluates the results of the agreement in Central America, not Colombia. The author does note that left-wing unions in Guatemala (UNISTRAGUA) maintained a comparable suspicion of the IUF because of its history of affiliating with the right, including employer-dominated “yellow” unions (16).
119. See www.bananalink.org.uk; www.usleap.org. Bananalink cites Colombian companies as having “one of the best records” in the world “for negotiating collective agreements with the workers,” www.bananalink.org.uk/companies/companies.htm.
120. See Joint Press Release, “IUF, COLSIBA and Chiquita sign historic agreement on trade union rights for banana workers,” June 14, 2001; “Chiquita tries high road,” at http://www.usleap.org/Banana/bananatempnew.htm.
121. Anne Claire Chambron, “Can Voluntary Standards Provide Solutions?” International Banana Conference 2 Preparatory Papers, 104, 106: http://www.ibc2.org/images/stories/textibc/finadoc.pdf.
122. John Bird, Bill Fairbairn, Carl Hetu, Rick Kitchen, Ken Luckhardt, David Onyalo, Don Smith, Paul Smith, “Report of the Canadian Trade Union Delegation to Colombia,” February 1998: http://www.colombiasupport.net/199802/canadaunion.html.
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126. Ibid., 15.
127. Otis, “Critics question Chiquita's claim.”
128. Reuters, “Colombia ‘good model’ for Afghan drug war, U.S. says,” January 19, 2007: http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=worldnews&storyID=2007-01-20T010936Z_01_N19329346_RTRUKOC_0_US-COLOMBIA-AFGHAN-DRUGS.xml.