Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Letter from Colombia Solidarity Campaign
to AngloAmerican, one of the owners of Cerrejon
protesting the expropriation of Roche in La Guajira

Colombia Solidarity Campaign,
BM Box Colombia Solidarity,
London WC1N 3XX
email: info@colombiasolidarity.org.uk

Sir John Parker, Chairman
and Mark Cutifani, Chief Executive,
Anglo American plc,
20 Carlton House Terrace,
London SW1Y 5AN.

27 August 2013

Dear Sir John Parker and Mark Cutifani,

We wish to express our outrage at the planned expropriation of the old village of Roche in La Guajira, Colombia.

This expropriation is a violation of the rights, dignity and wellbeing of the eight families remaining in the village. The judge in San Juan del Cesar who authorised this act of violence was acting at the request of Carbones del Cerrejon, in which your company owns a one-third share.

Among the inhabitants of the village are around fifteen children aged between one and fifteen years, ten adult women and two elderly people.

This eviction is the latest example of the systematic pressure and abuse which this community, along with many others in the area, has been suffering over the past thirty years as a result of opencast coal mining. The initial promise of development and improvement in living conditions has been transformed into a reality of eviction and impoverishment. Thousands of people have been displaced, and many who have remained have suffered loss of livelihood and cultural impoverishment as a result of environmental destruction.

The Colombian State has not complied with the order of the Supreme Court of Justice of 13 September 2012, which demanded that a process of prior consultation be undertaken in the area. The forced displacement of Roche would be a negation of the community’s constitutional rights and a threat to the community’s ability to make any kind of living.

The eight families remaining in Roche have resisted a process of relocation which has involved inordinate pressure on residents to sell up at minimal prices and move to a new community which has inadequate land for the cattle herding on which some of the families have relied for their livelihood. Some of the residents of the new community report that the economic development projects promised by Cerrejon Coal as a replacement for agricultural work have been badly mismanaged by the company and have left people in a state of need.

The way the relocation has been handled has split the community. Negotiators for the remaining eight families, and North American observers of the negotiation process, report that officials from Carbones del Cerrejon have shown deep disrespect for the farming families, refusing to take seriously many of the matters which Roche residents have raised. It is this disrespect which has led to the present stalemate. The company has responded to the stalemate not with a new attempt at respectful negotiation but with legalised brutality.

The eight families at old Roche are terrified that what happened at Tabaco on 9 August 2001 is about to happen to them. Former residents of Tabaco, violently evicted on that day, were scattered to various locations and their community life destroyed. Despite a settlement with Carbones del Cerrejon after many years of struggle, the people of Tabaco have still not been able to take possession of the new community which they were promised. Depression and ill health have afflicted some of them as a result.

The remaining villagers at Roche were due to be forcibly evicted on Thursday 29 August. Pressure from villagers and their supporters has led to the postponement, but not the abandonment, of the planned eviction. What is needed at old Roche is not forced displacement but a changed attitude on the part of company negotiators so that a just settlement can be reached.  We demand that the company negotiate in good faith in order to come to an agreement, and not continue with the expropriation.

Yours sincerely,



Andy Higginbottom,

Secretary, CSC.

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