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Friday, October 17, 2008

Obama Lied About Columbia And Unions

Senator Obama needs to find a new excuse for not supporting the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement. During the debate the other night the Democratic Messiah blamed Columbia saying:
The history in Colombia right now is that labor leaders have been targeted for assassination, on a fairly consistent basis, and there have not been any prosecutions."
Chalk that up as another Senator Obama Lie. As Reported in the Wall Street Journal today, since President Álvaro Uribe took office in 2002, there has been a significant reduction of violence in the country:

Obama Makes It Up Repeating union distortions.

In Wednesday night's debate with John McCain, Barack Obama defended his opposition to the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement this way: "The history in Colombia right now is that labor leaders have been targeted for assassination, on a fairly consistent basis, and there have not been any prosecutions." Among the many falsehoods in this Presidential campaign, this is one of the worst.

It is true that Colombia has a history of violence. But since President Álvaro Uribe took office in 2002, that violence has been substantially reduced. The homicide rate through the end of 2007 was down by 40.4% and the rate among union members was down almost 87%. There is nothing "consistent" about a drop to 26 union member murders in 2007 from 155 in 2000.

As for prosecutions: In union-member killings, there were zero convictions from 1991-2000 and one in 2001. But from 2002-2007, there were 80. According to the Colombian attorney general's office, 29% of those murders were "found to have been results of theft, petty crime and random violence unrelated to union activity." Mr. Uribe has nonetheless created a special investigative unit for crimes against union members, and he expanded a special government protection program for unions.

More broadly, in 2004 Mr. Uribe pushed through congress a judicial reform that has reduced the average time needed to issue an indictment for a homicide to 50 days from 493. He also increased the budget for the attorney general's office to $598 million in 2008, from $346 million in 2002 -- a 73% increase.

If Colombia hopes to keep spending on judicial improvements and better law enforcement, it needs an expanding economy. In addition to misrepresenting the country's progress on reducing violence, Mr. Obama has never explained how denying Colombians the FTA will help the country reduce violence. Maybe this is because he knows he's merely repeating union distortions.


1 comment:

Izzy Bee said...

Nearly 400 trade unionists have been murdered since Uribe’s inauguration in August 2002. Of the 236 murders of union members that occurred between 2004 and 2006, the government has secured convictions in only five cases.However,
convictions have happened in only three trade union murder cases in the first half of 2007.

USLEAP- info supplied by Colombian government