Make that 4,320 pounds,10 shillings.
http://www.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=148490&group=webcast
We must hunt down and destroy all who support terrorism, including GW Bush! 
(english)
by Mark Thomas, New Statesman 11:04am Mon Mar 11 '02 (Modified on 5:08pm 
Mon Mar 11 '02)


A writer from the UK's New Statesman makes his "own contribution to the war 
on terrorism" by promising his "earnings to anyone who'll kill Bush" for 
his support of Colombiam terrorism.
A basic rule of life is: never cross a picket line, unless it is the police 
who are on strike. Then you have to, as a point of principle. Nor should it 
stop there. Why not volunteer to do a spot of patrolling, randomly 
photograph the striking officers and in general be sarcastic to them, along 
the lines of: "This your brazier is it, sir?" and "Got a receipt for it, 
have you?"

The police won't strike, obviously, but they have planned a demonstration 
in Whitehall, which all activists and trade unionists should attend. Not 
out of solidarity, but just to see the look of confusion on the cops' faces 
as they try to fight back the urge to baton-charge themselves and arrest 
their own ringleaders. If only the event could be stewarded by ex-miners 
and print workers . . .

In truth, the police demo will be full of journalists, bemused onlookers 
and unimaginative placards. Reality doesn't have the sense of justice and 
symmetry it should have. Reality is dull and often implemented with rapidly 
moving blunt instruments. Or company cheques made out to "The Republican 
Party of America".

For those on the receiving end of America's blunt instruments, the words 
"never cross a picket line" are not spoken glibly. A month ago, I wrote of 
the death threats received by trade unionists in Cali, Colombia, who, in a 
stand against corruption and privatisation, occupied the headquarters of 
the utility company Emcali. They knew there would be a price to pay for 
standing up to globalisation, and that the right-wing paramilitaries would 
exact it.

With sickening predictability, the murders have started.

On 11 February, Julio Galeano, a father of three and a member of the "Save 
Emcali" strike committee, was killed as he left his home. The assassin put 
a 9mm handgun under his lower left jaw and shot him. As his wife, Viviana, 
ran for her life, Julio was shot three more times in the face. He was 
murdered by the paramilitary United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC).

Last week, I met a group of Julio's friends, who told me about the rise of 
AUC activity and recruitment drives in the Siloe area, where Julio lived. 
The "paras" meet on the local football pitch to recruit unemployed young 
men. The starting pay is #120 a month, a good wage, but the biggest 
incentive to join the death squads is that, in the neighbouring area of 
Aqua Blanca, 150 young people have been murdered since August last year 
because they refused to join the AUC.

The AUC's leader, Carlos Castano, has said that the forces are 70 per cent 
funded by the cocaine trade. The US Drug Enforcement Agency named him as 
being involved in money-laundering and the trans-shipment of cocaine. 
Castano even boasted on his website ( [http://www.colombialibre.org]) that 
he had kidnapped and killed Aury Sara Marrugo, a regional president of the 
oil workers' union. Yet Castano has not even been questioned about this by 
the Colombians, nor targeted by the forces of the US war on drugs.

Castano's anti-democratic views and activities are not the only things he 
shares with President Bush. "We have always proclaimed that we are the 
defenders of business freedom and of the national and international 
industrial sectors," said Bush in 2000. That doesn't sound too surprising, 
does it? You wouldn't expect Bush to say any-thing else. But I have to 
admit, I lied. Bush didn't say those words. They are the words of Carlos 
Castano. The self-confessed murderer, drug-dealer and death-squad leader 
stands shoulder to shoulder with Bush on his trade liberalisation agenda.

Sometimes it is hard to tell which one is the murderer with the business 
agenda and which one is the businessman with the murderous agenda.

Bush has already overseen $2bn in military aid to Colombian brigades with 
links to the AUC, who share equipment, information and membership with the 
"paras". Now he plans to give $98m to the Colombian armed forces to protect 
Occidental Petroleum's Cano Limon oil pipeline. Once again, this money will 
go to those involved in the worst human rights abuses in the region. Once 
again, the money will help arm the murderers of trade unionists, human 
rights activists and peasants.

President Andres Pastrana's ending of talks with the Revolutionary Armed 
Forces of Colombia (FARC) and invasion of the FARC-held demilitarised zone 
(roughly the size of Switzerland) can only lead to further human rights 
abuses. As the FARC guerrillas move out of the area, so the "paras" will 
move in, and the peasants will start to pay the price that Julio paid.

Given that Osama Bin Laden has a price on his head and is wanted dead or 
alive for organising acts of terrorism, it seems only fair to offer a 
bounty to anyone who can kill George Bush. After all, he is helping to 
bankroll the AUC. So my contribution to the war against terrorism is to 
offer #4,320, my total earnings so far for writing in the New Statesman, to 
anyone who can bag Bush. You don't have to bring me his head or snack on 
his heart. Nothing weird, just kill him and send me your bank details c/o 
the New Statesman.

Having said that, if some would-be assassin wants to give me the option, 
I'd like him taken out with a lethal papier-mache weapon crafted from 
flour, water, dictionaries and Enron share certificates. However, these are 
the finer points of President Bush's demise.

I would obviously settle for him accidentally stabbing himself to death 
with the pin from his enamel US flag badge.

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