Overwhelming
international solidarity for the former sugarcane workers in ANAIRC
Thousands of protest
letters are pouring in...
and it’s just the
beginning
The
struggle of the former sugarcane workers of Ingenio San Antonio
-property of Nicaragua Sugar Estates Ltd. (NSEL), a Pellas Group
company- gathered in the Nicaraguan Association of People Affected by
Chronic Renal Failure (ANAIRC) is receiving overwhelming, and somewhat
unexpected, support from thousands of people around the world who have
joined these workers in calling for the Pellas Group and its sugar
companies to heed the demands of CRF victims.
Thousands of letters, cards and e-mails are pouring into the e-mail and
postal addresses of NSEL, the Pellas Group and
companies throughout the world that import and distribute the Flor de
Caña rum, the iconic product of this powerful Nicaraguan consortium.
These protest messages are flooding mailboxes in an unprecedented
display of solidarity.
This
response stands in stark contrast to the silence of the majority of the
media and the country’s social organizations, which apparently prefer to
shut their eyes as they pass by the campsite set up with great effort by
the former sugarcane workers and widows of ANAIRC near the
Managua cathedral and the Pellas Building.
The
demands of the former workers of Ingenio San Antonio are also
spreading throughout the Internet, as they are taken up by hundreds of
websites, translated into different languages. The expressions of
solidarity multiply as photographs and videos of ANAIRC’s rallies
in front of the Pellas Building, the marches in the streets of Managua
and the day-to-day struggle at the campsite, where protesters survive
thanks to international support, are viewed around the world.
Peuples
Solidaires,
a French international solidarity organization formed by over 70 local
groups and approximately 9,000 members, launched an “Urgent
Call” to support ANAIRC’s struggle. So far,
more than 1,500 e-mails and hundreds of cards have poured into the
mailboxes of NSEL and the Pellas Group thanks to this
initiative. The action is backed by the French organization Sucre
Ethique and the IUF’s Latin American Regional Office.
This
organization invites French citizens to sign a letter asking
Nicaragua Sugar Estates Ltd. to “agree to enter into negotiations
with ANAIRC, which has been demanding for years that the company
take responsibility for its indiscriminate use of agrotoxic chemicals in
the sugarcane plantations and for the pollution of the area’s aquifers,
and is claiming compensation for the damages caused to the health of
workers.”
Fanny
Gallois,
an activist with Peuples Solidaires, says: “our organization
supports men and women around the world who are fighting for their
rights, and in particular their labor rights and their rights to land
and food. In this sense, we inform and mobilize people in France
and put pressure on companies and public authorities to respect these
rights.”
“When
we heard about the conditions that thousands of victims of Nicaragua’s
sugarcane plantations are surviving in -she continued- we decided that
it was important to make the situation known, because sometimes the
worst enemy in this kind of struggle is silence. We began by informing
our network of French citizens and printing out about 7,000 copies of
the ‘urgent call.’ We sent some 1,600 e-mail messages, so that our
partners would start massively sending protest messages to Nicaragua
Sugar Estates Ltd and the Pellas Group.”
“We
believe –the Peuples Solidaires activist concluded– that this is
an effective way of making NSEL understand that the world is
watching, and that it can’t go on ignoring an international public
opinion that demands that it respect the dignity of its former workers
organized in ANAIRC. Here in France we’ve had a huge
response to the news of ANAIRC’s struggle. We’ve received calls
and messages asking for more information on the situation in
Nicaragua, and we’re going to do everything possible to bring global
attention to this struggle, which is part of a greater mobilization of
millions of men and women that are demanding respect for their rights
and dignity.”
More
solidarity
Just a
few days ago, the IUF’s Latin American Regional Office sent a
letter to the president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega,
announcing the launching of a global solidarity campaign in support of
its affiliate ANAIRC, and asking the Nicaraguan government to
step in.
Now the
IUF’s International Executive Committee approved a resolution
officially launching this campaign, which will be global in scope, with
the goal of getting NSEL and the Pellas Group to heed the
demands of their former workers. Ethanol exports to Europe will
be part of this campaign.
The
Italy-Nicaragua Association, which has been conducting a small pilot
project for some years now, providing health care for CRF victims
who are members of ANAIRC, has also been supporting the struggle
of the former sugarcane workers through awareness-raising efforts and
humanitarian aid for the people at the campsite.
“Our
Association privileges solidarity with organizations that work on the
field and are able to organize different forms of struggle,” Federica
Comelli, member of the National Coordinating Body of the
Italy-Nicaragua Association, said to Sirel.
In this
case, we also have to take into account the issue of impunity that
transnational corporations enjoy, especially in Latin America.
These corporations form a very strong power bloc that often acts above
the law and disregards national sovereignty.
“We believe -Comelli continued- that ANAIRC’s struggle
can’t be seen merely as a defense of these workers’ rights or a
claim for compensation, because it is a struggle that questions the
economic model. The silence of the Pellas Group and the threats
against ANAIRC members are evidence that this struggle bothers a
great many people and brings up very important issues, such as the
protection of health and the environment, and the high social costs of
the indiscriminate use of agrotoxic substances.”
The Flor de Caña Rum Boycott Group is another display of the
interest that ANAIRC’s struggle is raising and the solidarity it
is receiving.
Almost 500 people from different parts of the world have joined this
effort to promote a boycott against this product, and, according to
sources close to ANAIRC, the boycott has started to have an
effect, causing the company to lose income and forcing it to hold on to
product stock it is unable to sell.
During
a videoconference on the ANAIRC struggle that was organized by
the Center for Health Advisory Services and Information (CISAS)
and broadcasted internationally, the young activists behind the Flor
de Caña Rum Boycott Group made their position known,
denouncing their “outrage at the bad corporate practices of the
Pellas economic Group, particularly through its Ingenio San
Antonio.” For this reason, they will
continue promoting the boycott against the emblematic rum as long as the
Pellas Group refuses to take action to “revise and change its
environmental and production practices, by discontinuing the use of
agrochemicals and sugarcane plantation burning methods, allowing
independent water, land and air pollution analyses in Ingenio San
Antonio and the surrounding areas, and as long as it refuses to
listen and give a response to the demands of the former sugarcane
workers organized in ANAIRC, acknowledging its direct
responsibility in the harm caused to the health of these workers,” the
public communication concludes.
Lastly,
on Sunday, May 17, during an activity held in Managua to commemorate the
birth of General Augusto C. Sandino, the organizing committee
“Sandino, luz de nuestra tierra” invited an ANAIRC delegation to
explain the reasons for their struggle, make an appeal for solidarity
with the former sugarcane workers, and promote the Flor de Caña
rum boycott.
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