08)
LILIANY OBANDO TRIAL TO RESUME IN FEBRUARY
(The following
article is from the January 16-31, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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PV Vancouver Bureau
The "rebellion" trial of Liliany
Obando, the labour and human rights activist imprisoned by the
Colombian regime, is slated to continue in February. Liliany was
recently once again denied "home arrest" so that she can care for her
two children, Camilo and Laura.
Meanwhile,
solidarity continues
to build in Canada and other countries. A very successful fundraiser
was held on Jan. 9 at the Tranzac Club in Toronto to help with her
legal defence. In other news, the Ontario Secondary School Teachers
Federation (OSSTF) will send a two-person delegation to Bogota next
month to visit Liliany and monitor the legal proceedings.
On December
10, 2009, United
Nations Human Rights Day, the International Network in Solidarity with
the Colombian Political Prisoners (INSPP) issued a statement in support
of Liliany Obando and all political prisoners, calling attention to
"the violation of the human rights of Colombia's political opposition
and its supporters. The Colombian government is waging a campaign to
criminalize critical thinking - a campaign that paves the way for
transnational access to Colombia's resources, underwritten with more
than (US) $7 billion in the US funded Plan Colombia.
"Of special
concern is the case
of Liliany Patricia Obando Villota, undergoing her trial process at
this very moment. She was jailed the very week she released a report on
the murders of more than 1,500 members of Fensuagro, Colombia's largest
union of farmers and farm workers.
"Liliany is
the first person to
be arrested and stand trial as part of the farc-politica. This is a
process attempting to connect members of the political and social
opposition to the FARC (the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia)
based on evidence contained in computers allegedly belonging to
Commandant Raul Reyes. The Colombian military claims it recovered these
computers after a bomb attack killed Reyes and more than 20 others. The
computers were in the hands of the Colombian police for over a week
before being turned over to the international police agency, INTERPOL.
"INTERPOL
says that tens of
thousands of the files contained therein showed signs of tampering by
Colombian authorities. Police Captain Roy Hayden Coy Ortiz, who oversaw
the initial investigation, testified in court that the computers
contained no emails, only Word documents. Alleged emails are the
foundation for the charges against Liliany.
"Liliany's
case is important for
two main reasons. First, while an acquittal would be a final blow to
the whole farc-politica, a conviction would revive it and open the way
for broad repression of dissent. A conviction would also strengthen
government efforts to destroy Fensuagro by providing a spurious link
with the FARC.
"Liliany and
her family have
been victims of a series of threatening emails and phone calls. Similar
emails have been received by the INSPP. The internationalization of
farc-politica intimidation has taken place at all levels. In a trip to
Canada earlier this year, President Uribe accused unionists and
solidarity activists visited by Liliany of being cells of the FARC. In
a violation of Colombian sovereignty and international law, Australian
Federal Police officer David Nelson, accompanied by two Colombian
officials, visited Liliany in prison, trying to get information about
unionists she had contacted in Australia. She refused to cooperate....
"As we
prepare this report,
Liliany is trying, for the 8th time, to get home detention during her
trial. This is a right that is commonly given to persons in many
circumstances, especially women, who like Liliany, are single mothers
and sole providers for their children... The right to home detention is
frequently provided to those sentenced for all kinds of crimes,
including convicted members of paramilitary death squads - yet Liliany
has been denied this right seven times.
"The
International Network in
Solidarity with the Colombian Political Prisoners calls on all its
supporters to demand that the Colombian government implement a
Humanitarian Exchange of prisoners as a first step in the political
solution to the deep social and complex armed conflict in the country.
- Demand that the Colombian
Attorney's General Office grant Liliany Obando home detention to allow
her to care for her children.
- Demand that the Colombian
government guarantee the safety of Liliany and her family.
- Request that human rights
organizations monitor the safety of Liliany and her family.