“A Liberal proposal that would fast-track the passage of a free trade agreement with Colombia does nothing
to protect the human rights of people in Colombia and ignores a parliamentary commitment to perform an
independent human rights impact assessment” said Denis Lemelin, National President of the Canadian Union
Postal Workers.
“In 2009, 45 trade unionists in Colombia were killed. The Liberal proposal to allow the Colombian
Government to monitor their own human rights violations won’t protect trade unionists. The Colombian
Government needs to stop these killings, instead of writing reports about them” Lemelin stated.
“Human rights assessments done by the Colombian Government will lack credibility and impartiality.
We need an independent Human rights Impact assessment to protect human rights in Colombia.”
In the House of Commons, Liberal trade critic Scott Brison proposed an amendment to the Canada-Colombia
FTA to include post-ratification annual rights assessments performed by each government. This Liberal
proposal flip-flops on a previous commitment in June 2008 of the all-party Commons Committee on International
Trade, that the free trade agreement should not be ratified until an independent human rights impact
assessment can be carried out first.
Recent UN and Amnesty International reports show escalating violence against Indigenous and Afro-Colombian
communities, including murder and forcible displacement from communal lands. “Our Government should not
sanction this violence by signing the Canada Colombia free trade agreement”, Lemelin said.
“Canada entering into a free trade agreement with Colombia now sends the wrong message to Canadians and
the Colombian regime. The human rights of Colombians should take priority over a trade deal.”
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For more information: Aalya Ahmed, Communications Specialist (CUPW), 613‑236‑7238, ext.7987.