DOCUMENTS
In the
Debate
Electronic Books
Chemical War and Pesticides
Current News
II Mesa Agraria del Caquetá,
I de
la CMI
Foro “Politica Nacional de
Drogas”
Conversatorio
Defensoría del
Pueblo de Colombia
PESTICIDE
INTOXICATION:
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CHEMICAL
WAR AND PESTICIDES
Fumigating the Nation's Parks
IMPUNITY IN CHEMICAL WAR IN COLOMBIA:
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Compendium of over 8.000 citizens' complaints of effects of fumigation
-
Martín
Jelsma:
Chronology Chemical and Biological War
-
International Coalition Condemms Fumigation
[November 2000]
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Sunshine Project:
Biological Weapons in the Drug War [December
2000]
-
Letter to Mary Robinson
(UN
Human Rights Commissioner) Requesting a Halt to Fumigation [July 17, 2001]
-
Kintto Lucas:
Anti-Coca Fumigation Takes Toll in Border Area
[July 15, 2001]
-
Complaint for equitable relief and for damages to
remedy the injury to their persons inflicted by the
fumigation actions
of Dyncorp
[September 2001]
-
Ted
Schettler MD, MPH:
Consultation Review of the Use of Pesticide for Coca Eradication in
Colombia
The
exposure assessment is incomplete because it is limited by unwarranted
assumptions about spraying conditions and routes of exposure. As a
consequence, the document provided by the EPA fails to provide data
sufficient for determining the magnitude of the risks of the spray program
and whether or not they are “unreasonable.” [August 19, 2002]
US
Embassy:
Memorandum of Justification Concerning Determination
on Health, Environmental, and Legal Aspects of Coca Eradication in
Colombia [September 2002]
Anna Cederstav, AIDA
Department of State Report to Congress regarding
Aerial Eradication Program in Colombia
This memo
comments on the DoS report to Congress and outlines the main reasons for
our conclusion that the DoS has failed to meet the conditions established
by the chemical procurement provision [September
23, 2002]
-
Reported Massive Exodus of Peasants from Putumayo with Health Effects from
Aerial Spraying
[September, 2002]
-
US Embassy:
The
Colombian Government's
Spray Compensation
Process
[September 2002]
-
Acción Ecológica -
Report on Verification Mission, "Impacts in Ecuador
of fumigations in Putumayo as part of Plan Colombia,
[October 2002]
-
Elsa Nivia(Rapalmira)
Fumigation induces further planting of illicit crops
in Colombia [September
2002]
-
Mama
Coca:
Human Rights and Environmental Violations
-
COCCA:
Don't Fumigate Us Anymore
-
America's Org:
Poison
Rain
-
Marco Cappato:
Parliamentary question on fumigation
[abril 28,
2003]
-
AIDA:AIDA
Memo
on Class Action Lawsuit [June
9, 2003]
-
Earthjustice:
Plan Colombia Threatens Human Health, Environment_[June 13, 2003]
-
OPIAC:
S.O.S. for Indigenous Peoples [July
2003]
-
Tribunal de Cundinamarca:
Colombian Court Orders
Suspension of Coca Spraying
-
Astrid Puentes y Thomas Ruppert:Provisions for Aerial Eradication of Coca and Poppy in Colombia Under U.S.
Law [May, 2003]
-
The Uribe Administration:
Resolución 0013:
"That
the Program for Eradicating Crops with the Herbicide Glyphosate,
PECIG, should be
considered as the mitigation plan exercised by the state in the face of
negative environmental impacts caused by illicit crop growers.."
[June 27, 2003]
(Two wrongs make it right)
-
Jeremy Bigwood:Scientists eye glyphosate-fusarium
-
To Save a Village
-
C.M. Benbrook:
Impacts of Genetically Modified Crops on Pesticide Use in the United
States
-
Monsanto & Genetic Engineering:
Risks for Investors (report prepared by
Innovest Strategic Value Advisors for Greenpeace) [abril, 2003]
-
Round-up Ready Sudden Death Syndrome
[November 2003]
-
MM Moreno
Alvaro Uribe's Reasons for Waging Chemical War
Against the Colombian People [November 2003]
-
US Department of State
Memorandum of Justification Concerning the Aerial
Eradication of Coca and Opium Poppy in Colombia
[December
2003]
-
US Goverment_
Certification of Aerial Fumigation with Chemical
Mixtures [December 15, 2003]
-
US Sate Deparment Report on the blessings of aerial
fumigation which chemical mixtures against Colombians
[January
2004]
Spray
operations...the politically correct term for bombing defenseless peoples
with chemical mixtures, as quoted from the US
Department of State:
"--Conducting spray operations is dangerous work. All of the pilots in the
spray program have extensive flying experience and receive specialized
training for the type of flying and local conditions that they will face.
We also provide advance survival training for our pilots in the case of a
forced landing. Each spray mission is planned for maximum security, using
all available intelligence. If a spray mission should face major risk, it
is cancelled or conducted with pre-positioned counterdrug ground troops.
There are armed security escort helicopters as well as at least one search
and rescue (SAR) helicopter. We are constantly evaluating our operations
to refine our procedures and improve security for our personnel."
(Distributed by the US State Department International Information Program.
To see the
full document:
The question is: Who will protect the Colombian
people from "our" personnel?
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