NED funding for Colombia, including labor projects, under scrutiny

Tim Shorrock tshorrock51 at hotmail.com
Thu Apr 25 05:07:03 PDT 2002


This could be an interesting investigation. Below this top graf is some data I got from the NED website on its funding for various projects in Colombia, including $60K for the AFL-CIO's solidarity center. I doubt seriously that the senior AFL people on international affairs would be involved in anything nefarious in Colombia because one of their first priorities was to clean up the mess left behind by AIFLD, notorious for its collaboration with the CIA. In recent years, global labor federations like ICFTU and ICEM (energy workers) strongly condemned Chavez's attempts to change the national labor leadership through referendums and other aspects of his labor policy. Yet nobody really knows what NED- and AID-funded labor groups are up to in Colombia and how much control the AFL actually exerts over people in sensitive countries like this where the Bush administration is heavily involved. Shedding some public light on these activities, and how they tie in with the 'private enterprise' projects, would be a good thing (I'm making no prejudgements, Nathan). TS

April 25, 2002 New York Times U.S. Bankrolling Is Under Scrutiny for Ties to Chavez Ouster By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS http://www.nytimes.com/2002/04/25/international/americas/25VENE.html WASHINGTON, April 24 _ In the past year, the United States channeled hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants to American and Venezuelan groups opposed to President Hugo Chavez, including the labor group whose protests led to the Venezuelan president's brief ouster this month.

http://www.ned.org/grants/00programs/grants-lac.html#Venezuela

Venezuela The American Center for International Labor Solidarity $60,084 To support the Confederation of Venezuelan Workers (CTV) to effect reforms intended to increase rank and file control over decision making. ACILS will conduct courses for regional federations of the CTV, focusing on problems and challenges for unions in a changing world, restructuring of labor organizations, and establishing internal elections for union leadership.

Center for International Private Enterprise $56,000 To enable the Center for the Dissemination Economic Information (CEDICE) to promote an informed democratic debate on legislation affecting economic reform, taxes and private property. CEDICE will sponsor large-scale national and regional forums on legislation that is constitutionally required to be enacted in the National Assembly's first year of operation.

Fundación Momento de la Gente $41,747 To help promote civilian oversight and transparency of the July 2000 elections. Fundación Momento de la Gente conducted a pre-electoral monitoring campaign to monitor the use of public funds in the campaign, participated in the electoral audit committee, reviewed election materials, and trained election observers.

International Republican Institute $50,000 To work with Fundación Participación Juvenil to promote democratic participation of Venezuelan youth.

PRODEL-Venezuela $50,000 To promote and defend decentralization in Venezuela. PRODEL will establish and train a network of national and state legislators and mayors to monitor government decentralization activities, advocate for the rights and responsibilities of state and local government in Venezuela, and analyze and debate pending legislation affecting local government.

April 25, 2002 New York Times U.S. Bankrolling Is Under Scrutiny for Ties to Chavez Ouster By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS

WASHINGTON, April 24 _ In the past year, the United States channeled hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants to American and Venezuelan groups opposed to President Hugo Chavez, including the labor group whose protests led to the Venezuelan president's brief ouster this month.

The funds were provided by the National Endowment for Democracy, a nonprofit agency created and financed by Congress. As conditions deteriorated in Venezuela and Mr. Ch vez clashed with various business, labor and media groups, the endowment stepped up its assistance, quadrupling its budget for Venezuela to more than $877,000.

While the endowment's expressed goal is to promote democracy around the world, the State Department's human rights bureau is examining whether one or more recipients of the money may have actively plotted against Mr. Ch vez. The bureau has put a $1 million grant to the endowment on hold pending that review, an official said.

"We wanted to make certain that U.S. government resources were not going to underwrite the unconstitutional overthrow of the government of Venezuela," said the official, who occupies a midlevel job in the department and asked not to be identified. The deputy spokesman for the State Department, Philip Reeker, said he was unaware of the proposed grant.

Of particular concern is $154,377 given by the endowment to the American Center for International Labor Solidarity, the international arm of the A.F.L.-C.I.O., to assist the main Venezuelan labor union in advancing labor rights.

The Venezuelan union, the Confederation of Venezuelan Workers, led the work stoppages that galvanized the opposition to Mr. Ch vez. The union's leader, Carlos Ortega, worked closely with Pedro Carmona Estanga, the businessman who briefly took over from Mr. Ch vez, in challenging the government.

The endowment also provided significant resources to the foreign policy wings of the Republican and Democratic parties for work in Venezuela, which sponsored trips to Washington by Ch vez critics.

The National Democratic Institute for International Affairs was given a $210,500 grant to promote the accountability of local government. The International Republican Institute, which has an office in Venezuela, received a grant of $339,998 for political party building. On April 12, the day of the takeover, the group hailed Mr. Ch vez's ouster. "The Venezuelan people rose up to defend democracy in their country," the institute's president, George A. Folsom, said in a statement. "Venezuelans were provoked into action as a result of systematic repression by the government of Hugo Ch vez."

The statement drew a sharp rebuke from Carl Gershman, the endowment president, for the openly political stance, which he said would undercut the institute's work in Venezuela in the future.

The institute has close ties to the Bush administration, which had also embraced the short-lived takeover; Lorne Craner, the assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor, is a former president of the organization.

In an interview, Mr. Folsom said discussions at the institute on Venezuela involved finding ways to remove Mr. Ch vez by constitutional means only.

Chris Sabatini, the endowment's senior program officer for Latin America and the Caribbean, said his agency's funds went to specific projects to bolster the democratic opposition in Venezuela _ including training in civics, journalism and conflict resolution _ and did not contribute to the attempted ouster of Mr. Ch vez.

"None of our funds in any way were used to support the coup," he said.

Mr. Sabatini acknowledged that the endowment had hurriedly increased its outlays in Venezuela in the past year as Mr. Ch vez and his supporters restricted press freedoms and sought to suppress growing dissent against his leftist policies. The goal was to create political space for opponents to Mr. Ch vez, not to contribute to his ouster, he said.

"We were very explicit that we had no opinion of Ch vez," but were responding to events, Mr. Sabatini said.

The Bush administration, which has made no secret of its disdain for Mr. Ch vez _ and his warm relations with nations like Cuba and Iraq _ has turned to the endowment to help the opposition to Mr. Ch vez.

With an annual budget of $33 million, the endowment disburses hundreds of grants each year to pro-democracy groups from Africa to Asia. Advocates say the agency's independent status enables the United States to support democratic actors in nations where American government aid might be cumbersome or unwelcome. Its supporters proudly cite critical assistance from the endowment to countries emerging from repressive systems like Poland and South Africa.

Jane Riley Jacobsen, a spokeswoman for the endowment, said her agency scrupulously maintained its independence from the federal government and avoided foreign policy debates.

But critics say recipients of endowment aid do not have the same accountability that government programs require, which opens the door for rogue activities and freelancing. The agency overreached, those critics say, in Chile in 1988 and in Nicaragua in 1989, when endowment funds were used to sway the outcomes of elections.

Barbara Conry, an analyst at the libertarian Cato Institute, said the organizing philosophy behind the endowment was flawed.

"You ended up with the worst of both worlds," she said. "Everybody knew it was directly funded by Washington. That didn't fool too many people. But it wasn't really accountable."

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company

Tim Shorrock Silver Spring MD Ph/Fax 301-585-3152



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