Aug. 2014, "Tackling the Root Causes of the Refugee Crisis at the U.S. Border," aflcio.org, Charlie Fanning
"Moving beyond a solely domestic response, the labor movement also
stressed the need for the U.S. government to address longstanding
concerns about labor rights abuses and a lack of access to decent work
in Central America.
Indeed, the situation for workers in Central
America is dire. In both Honduras and Guatemala, the AFL-CIO and its
labor movement counterparts in those countries have filed complaints
under the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), alleging that
those governments are complicit in serious violations of workers’
rights. Trade unionists have reported that the governments of Honduras
and Guatemala have done little to stop ongoing threats, retaliation and
even the murder of labor activists. Guatemala is the most dangerous country in the world for trade union activity and Honduras has the highest murder rate in the world for a country not at war.
While
U.S. government representatives are in the process of assessing the
situation in Guatemala, for more than two years the U.S. Labor
Department has failed to act on the Honduras complaint. This
prompted a renewed call last week from the AFL-CIO and the Honduran
labor movement for the U.S. government to respond to complaints, issue a
report on findings and begin a process to address the violations.
More
than any other Central American country, Honduran workers and their
families have been fleeing an acute jobs crisis and systemic violence,
which their own government has perpetuated failing to protect its
citizens’ rights to join together in trade unions and collectively
improve their working conditions.
Had it acted promptly to address the
failures of the Honduran government to protect workers, the U.S.
government already could have been on the way to addressing many of the
“push factors” involved in the current refugee crisis.
To complement this ongoing work, the AFL-CIO and Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA)
recently hosted a briefing for congressional staff discussing how U.S.
trade, foreign and development policies have negatively affected the
countries from which children are fleeing.
The panel shared
first-hand accounts of how labor exploitation, violence, failed
development strategies and the legacy of civil war in Central America
has left the region devastated, while CAFTA, specifically, has done
nothing to improve conditions and has only exacerbated displacement. The
speakers urged lawmakers and their staff to turn away from
short-sighted solutions and consider measures to improve U.S. trade
policies, promote decent work and prevent future funding for corrupt
military and police forces in the states most affected
.
The
AFL-CIO Executive Council committed America’s labor movement to provide
support for refugees and stand with workers in Central America. Unions
will continue working with civic leaders, clergy, refugee and immigrant
rights groups and other community organizations to ensure children’s
health, educational, safety and legal needs are met. In the months
ahead, AFL-CIO unions also will organize a high-level labor delegation
to investigate the root causes of the crisis and develop recommendations
for addressing them.
Until the U.S. government can craft an
appropriate, long-term policy response that tackles problems on both
sides of the border, there will be no end in sight for the current
refugee crisis."
...............
http://www.aflcio.org/Blog/Political-Action-Legislation/Tackling-the-Root-Causes-of-the-Refugee-Crisis-at-the-U.S.-Border
===========
George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.
Showing posts with label US has made refugee crisis worse by failing to enforce its trade agreements. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US has made refugee crisis worse by failing to enforce its trade agreements. Show all posts
Monday, September 19, 2016
US has exacerbated refugee crisis by lack of attention to its trade agreements, failed to act on labor abuse complaints in Honduras and Guatemala under Central America Free Trade Agreement filed by AFL CIO. Had US gov. promptly addressed abuses under CAFTA, fewer Hondurans would be 'refugees' to the US. Refugee crisis won't end until US enforces its own trade agreements-AFL CIO blog, August 2014
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- susan
- I'm the daughter of an Eagle Scout and World War II Air Force pilot born in Brooklyn, finally settling in New Jersey.