MISSION - keeganrs@gmail.com

My blog is about my dream for a world where everyone is allowed to exist and improving the quality of life of the world’s citizens is our priority.

For many reasons I reject the current path of the world.

Rich world insanity, excess and lies. Poor world denial of human rights and food. The destruction of the planet. Our homogenisation into one consuming mass of idiots.

We need to look for new ways. New human interactions at every level. New models of participation or at least rescuing old ones. Things like couchsurfing.com and woolf.org are steps in this direction as are the models of health and education being created and implemented in Venezuela.

We need to stand up and say "Enough!" to the current regimes and look to support all those initiatives for a better world and create our own. 

Sunday 7 January 2007

Drugs?


The picture is a graffiti on many walls in Bogota it is a commentary on Bush sending money to spray Coca crops at the expense of many farmers health and livelihood. It's a controversial topic. Each droplet of poison from the plane falls with a $$$ symbol in it. It's all about money! "Adelante presidente!" means something like "Go President!"

I´m in Colombia! Finally I have made it to South America the destination that I was originally inspired to explore. I have 3 months left to see what I can before it´s back to Australia to begin the next chapter.

In Colombia I have been so far to Barranquilla the second biggest city of the country with around 3 million people, Cartagena a beach, colonial tourist town and Medellin another big city 14 hours from Cartagena. So far my impression is that they have greater inequality than those countries I have already visited. There are a small percentage of very rich and a bigger second tier of well off people before a lower class of unemployed and under-employed. The number of under employed is demonstrated by the millions living off selling in the streets. I think these semi-legal enterprises are even more numerous here than Mexico and make up a massive part of the economy. Now they are bringing in a new free trade agreement with the US as most countries of Central America have just signed these businesses are threatened by cheap imports and competition laws favouring multinational sellers. There are many people living in the streets in the three cities men, women and children.

The need for social reform is as clear as anywhere here with only 3% of the population having access to university and 70-80% completing primary school. Education is elite currently there are graffiti protests in Medellin about privatization of the technical college here which threatens to up costs and further limit opportunities. There is however a feel of wealth and prosperity, Christmas lights and advertisements about the new projects of the city and a very clean efficient metro system are symbolic of the people of Medellin. They have an obsession with superficial beauty while leaving the numerous homeless to excrete in the street for lack of free toilets. You can see the slum dwelling "basurera" (garbage people) from the pristine metro service that the people are so proud of. The metro itself excludes all poor people by cost and numerous police at every station. Order is maintained here by massive numbers and active presence of police and army along with a truce among drug traffickers in the city. (Formerly it was the city with the highest murder rate in the world.)

People here voted Uribe back into power recently for a large part on the basis that he aims to exterminate the guerrillas with whom the government has been fighting for the last 40 years with the help of US funding ($billions annually and the greatest recipient of US "aid" outside the middle east). The guerrilla forces begun fighting for social justice for the neglected people of the jungle under a socialist banner. They provided for these people and there own campaigning with drug money. Now most people say the war is just for who gets to export the coke, if the government succeeds in exterminating the rebel forces do you think the supply of drugs to the world will fall? Most experts on the situation don´t consider success of ending cocain availability a posibility. People are tired of the war and enjoy that now they are able to travel within and between cities with less fear of kidnappings or robbery. No doubt this is a good thing. The way it is being achieved is generally accredited to killing off the rebels and forcing them deeper into the jungle. History tells the story that this is not the way to achieve peace both here and abroad (Israel, Ireland etc.)

For now it seems that the people in need of a new government are content with the increased security. Uribe got around 60% of the vote with less than 50% participation. The movement of the left which has been going on in the jungle for over 40 years is now distant from the ideals of the poor in the cities. Some are looking to Venezuela with a socialist government making socialist reforms with envy while others think that the US support is Colombia´s way out of trouble and acting against them, as Chavez is doing, is not a way to get out of poverty.

From the hostel scene here and the few elite friends I have made here it seems that for tourists and the rich drugs are readily available and cheap. They seem equally accessible here as in other parts of Latin America I have been although here people are stopped and searched in the street more often making it more dangerous to carry them. There is someone with a machine gun in view constantly walking in the city, either police or private security. They harass the young and the homeless in the interests of security.

I´m looking forward now to a few days out of the cities somewhere on the way to Bogotá before making my way towards Venezuela.

No comments: