Colombia
Colombia, palm workers, worker rights, Solidarity Center
  In Colombia, the Solidarity Center works with unions to protect freedom of association, end labor subcontracting and promote inclusion of women and Afro-descendant workers, in a context of rampant labor rights violations, anti-union retaliation, and violence against union activists. Colombia remains among the top 10 most dangerous countries for union members and leaders who are targets of harassment, death threats and assassinations. In 2011, the governments of Colombia and the United States signed the Labor Action Plan to address the violence. The Labor Action Plan restricts employer subcontracting and outsourcing, and the Solidarity Center joins with workers and their unions to demand direct, formal hiring, and provides hands-on support through training and technical and legal assistance for workers in the five priority sectors outlined in the Labor Action Plan: ports, palm, flowers, oil and mining. In the palm oil sector, for example, the Solidarity Center supports union outreach to workers, many of whom are fraudulently subcontracted, enabling employers to undermine their rights because they are not protected under Colombia’s labor laws. In March 2018, palm oil workers formed the General Union of Third-Party Agribusiness Workers (UGTTA), now representing 1,000 members. The Solidarity Center has also been successful in increasing the union representation of oil workers who are subject to hazardous working conditions in rural areas that were former conflict zones.  With Solidarity Center support, union partners in these and other sectors have been able to prepare and submit legal challenges to promote employer compliance with, and government enforcement of, laws that prohibit precarious forms of labor contracting. Afro-Colombians, the vast majority who live in poverty, suffer from exploitative working environments, and the Solidarity Center works with port workers and other Afro-descendants to improve conditions on the job. In the city of Buenaventura, the Solidarity Center has played a part in increasing union protections for Afro-Colombian workers in the health care, public utilities and port sectors. Meanwhile, with increasing migration from Venezuela to Colombia, the Solidarity Center has provided legal assistance and labor rights education for Venezuelan migrants to support their efforts to obtain economic self-sufficiency, food security and citizenship rights.

Media Contact

Kate Conradt
Communications Director
(+1) 202-974 -8369

 

Palm Oil Workers Strike for Recognition as Employees

More than 1,000 palm oil workers on strike outside San Alberto, Colombia are seeking recognition as employees. As subcontracted workers, they have no rights under Colombia’s labor laws, including freedom of association and the right to negotiate working conditions....

Social Justice Unionism: Labor Can Make Change

“Informal workers are organizing and they will organize as long as there is injustice and oppression,” says Sue Schurman, distinguished professor of Labor Studies and Employment Relations at Rutgers University. Opening a Solidarity Center book launch and panel...

Colombia Activists Honored at 20th Anniversary Event

Leonila Murillo, a decades-long leader in Buenaventura, Colombia, and Angel Miguel Conde Tapia, a Colombian palm oil worker and union vice president are among the extraordinary leaders and activists who will be honored for their dedication to improving the lives of...
Union Leader Murdered in Colombia

Union Leader Murdered in Colombia

The president of a local branch of Colombia’s National Union of Agricultural Workers (SINTRAINAGRO) was fatally shot by gunmen on a motorcycle on July 1 while watching his son play soccer. Alberto Román Acosta González led the Guacarí SINTRAINAGRO branch in Colombia's...

Colombia Workers, Community Win Landmark Pact

Colombia Workers, Community Win Landmark Pact

After 22 days of peaceful protests, workers, unions and other civil society groups in Buenaventura, the country’s largest port city, won a landmark agreement with the Colombian government. On June 6, the government agreed to invest more than $500 million in the...

Buenaventura Port Workers Call for Formal Jobs

Buenaventura Port Workers Call for Formal Jobs

The Colombia Port Workers’ union is calling on the Ministry of Labor to follow up on promises it made during a congressional hearing this week and resume discussions with the union and the Buenaventura Port Society over formalizing 3,500 illegally outsourced workers...

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