Pubdate: Wed, 17 Apr 2002 Source: Mobile Register (AL) Copyright: 2002 Mobile Register. Contact: http://www.al.com/mobileregister/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/269 Author: Joe Danborn COLOMBIAN ACTIVISTS PRESS COAL GIANT'S RIGHTS RECORD Protests Come as Congress Considers More Aid with Fewer Strings Attached U.S. companies doing business in Colombia are contributing to that country's political and economic hardships, even as Congress seeks to increase aid to the South American country, according to Colombian activist Ligia Ines Alzate. Alzate told a gathering Monday in Mobile that companies such as Alabama coal giant Drummond Co. Inc. have caused further strife in a country so war-torn that women head more than half of all households. "We are the widows, the mothers, the sisters of the armed combatants," Alzate, an elementary school principal and activist for women's rights and unions, said through a translator. Lawyers for the United Mine Workers of America and the International Labor Rights Fund filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Drummond last month in federal court in Birmingham. The lawsuit alleges the company paid paramilitary groups to torture and murder three leaders of the union that represents workers at Drummond's Colombian mines. Those allegations and U.S. foreign policy will dom inate a four-day "mobilization" by human rights demonstrators -- including a pair of nuns from Mobile -- this weekend in Washington, D.C. The protests come as Colombian President Andres Pastrana and President Bush ask Congress for more anti-narcotics aid to Colombia, a notion loathe to some, including U.S. Rep. Sonny Callahan, R-Mobile. A Mobile Register interview request left Tuesday with a secretary for Mike Tracy, a Drummond vice president in Birmingham, went unacknowledged. Instead, the company issued a statement denying the allegations in the lawsuit and questioning the motives of the groups filing it. The International Labor Rights Fund, the statement noted, has made similar allegations against and sued other corporations, including The Coca-Cola Company, Exxon Mobil Corp. and Del Monte Foods. Drummond's statement also accused the United Mine Workers of America, which has a contract with the company and has criticized its Colombian operations, of seeking "to destroy the jobs of the Colombian worker." Drummond has shut down several coal mines in northern Alabama in recent years as it has expanded its operations in Colombia. Last year, the company imported 7 million tons of coal through the McDuffie Island Bulk Terminal at the Alabama State Docks in Mobile. The bulk of that coal feeds Alabama Power Co.'s Barry Steam Plant in north Mobile County. Drummond has lobbied in the past for billions in U.S. aid to protect American investments in Colombia, appropriations that Callahan has supported. But last week, during a House appropriations subcommittee hearing, Callahan said that money seems to have gone for naught and compared U.S. involvement in Colombia to that in Haiti and the Middle East. "We have provided Colombia with more money than any other nation in this hemisphere," Callahan said. "Now, we're proposing another half a billion dollars toward that effort to resolve a problem that really ... is our own problem, because we keep buying these drugs and creating the market." The Bush administration has identified Colombia's three major guerrilla groups as terrorist organizations, an increasingly common criterion in requests for federal dollars since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. Bush's plan also would ease restrictions attached to the billions of dollars already committed to fight Colombian drug traffickers, requirements that limit U.S. military involvement and mandate human rights monitoring. The vast majority of the more than 200 kidnappings and killings of union members worldwide in 2000 took place in Colombia, according to a U.S. State Department report. Colombia's decades-long infighting has claimed tens of thousands of lives, with a sharp increase in violence since the U.S. government stepped up its involvement about 12 years ago, said Sandra Alvarez, who translated for Alzate. Alvarez's California-based nonprofit group, Global Exchange, sponsored Alzate's appearance at Mobile Gas Service Corp.'s auditorium in conjunction with The Quest for Social Justice, a recently formed interfaith group in Mobile that emphasizes civic action. Two Quest members and Sisters of Mercy, Magdala Thompson and Marilyn Graf, left Tuesday for the demonstration in Washington. Alzate spoke Tuesday in Montgomery and plans an appearance in Birmingham today. She will not be meeting with Drummond officials, organizers said. Drummond, regularly listed in Forbes Magazine as one of the 500 largest private companies in the country, has real estate developments in California and Florida. It also owns the 2,500-acre Liberty Park residential development in Birmingham and still operates the Shoal Creek Mine in Jefferson County. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex