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  1. #1
    Senior Member AmericanElizabeth's Avatar
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    Colombians want banana execs extradited

    Colombians want banana execs extradited
    3/16/2007, 6:19 p.m. PT
    By TOBY MUSE
    The Associated Press


    BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Outraged Colombians called Friday for the United States to extradite American banana executives after the Cincinnati-based fruit giant Chiquita acknowledged paying money for protection to illegal groups that carried out killings.

    Chiquita settled a U.S. Justice Department probe by agreeing Wednesday to pay a $25 million fine and acknowledging that its wholly owned subsidiary Banadex paid $1.7 million to far-right paramilitaries labeled terrorists by the United States. Chiquita also admitted funding Colombia's two main leftist rebel groups, but the U.S. complaint offered no information about how much it paid them.

    Chiquita portrayed itself as a victim of Colombian violence, and Wall Street analysts quickly declared the chapter closed, giving reassuring guidance to Chiquita shareholders that led to a sharp rise in share prices.

    Chiquita said Banadex "had been forced to make payments to right- and left-wing paramilitary groups in Colombia to protect the lives of its employees. The payments made by the company were always motivated by our good faith concern for the safety of our employees."

    But many aspects of the case remain unresolved in Colombia, where the chief prosecutor's office was preparing Friday to ask the administration of President Bush for details.

    The U.S. Justice Department said Chiquita's payments to the paramilitaries "were reviewed and approved by senior executives of the corporation, to include high-ranking officers, directors and employees," but didn't name names.

    Jaime Bernal Cuellar, a former Colombian attorney general, joined opposition lawmakers in calling for the extradition to Colombia of all those involved.

    "A criminal investigation of the people who financed these illegal groups should begin immediately," he said.

    The chief federal prosecutor's office said it would ask the U.S. Justice Department for information on Chiquita's role concerning a report that a Banadex ship was allegedly used to unload 3,000 rifles and more than 2.5 million bullets in November 2001 for use by Colombia's paramilitaries. The shipment was revealed in a 2003 report by the Organization of American States.

    Chiquita spokesman Michael Mitchell acknowledged the OAS report Friday in an e-mail to The Associated Press, and said Banadex changed its policies as a result. But he said "there is no information that would lead us to believe that Banadex did anything improper."

    Colombia's chief prosecutor's office isn't so sure. For one thing, it noted that the four people already convicted in the arms smuggling scheme included Banadex's legal represenative, Giovanny Hurtado Torres.

    Some Colombian politicians also questioned the U.S. government's role in the scandal.

    According to U.S. court documents, Chiquita told the Justice Department in April 2003 that it was funding the paramilitaries, and then kept paying them for another 10 months with the department's knowledge.

    "My question is: How much more does the U.S. government know about payments to the paramilitaries?" asked Sen. Jorge Robledo, a leading opposition lawmaker.

    Chiquita's involvement with the paramilitaries developed at a time when the right-wing groups were growing quickly and deepening ties with politicians, security forces and businesses across Colombia.

    In Antioquia state, Chiquita's business boomed as the groups took over banana-growing lands and were blamed for the killings of human rights workers and trade unionists. The U.S. complaint noted that "by 2003, Banadex was defendant Chiquita's most profitable banana-producing operation."

    Chiquita, which sold Banadex in June 2004 for around $43.5 million — said it was merely trying to protect its workforce in a violent region.

    So this is how these big companies work? Seems they care more about uninterupted production, than anything else. Safety of their employees? Common sense tells you that if they knew there was a problem, why did they not go to the Colombian government instead of doing this? If so they may have encoutered problems, red tape, and that meant interupted harvesting, and interupted sales.

    Great American company, seems these days we have a lot of these, money before morals. This way of doing business is a big amount of where our illegal alien problems lie, along with the under-funded border.
    "In the beginning of a change, the Patriot is a scarce man, Brave, Hated, and Scorned. When his cause succeeds however,the timid join him, For then it costs nothing to be a Patriot." Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #2
    Senior Member CCUSA's Avatar
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    This is outrageous! Throw the book at these executives!!

    They are criminals!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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