Colombia Action Network participates in massive protests against 'School of Assassins'
The following article from Fight Back! Newspaper highlight some of the Colombia Action Network's activities at the School of the Americas protest at Ft. Benning. Members of the CAN gathered hundreds of signatures to demand Lily Obando's release, and distributed 2000 flyers with information about her struggle for justice. One of our national coordinators, Meredith Aby, spoke at two workshops to highlight Obando's case and the broader context of the assault on trade unionists, and the peasants and agricultural workers movement in Colombia; while Chapin Gray, an organizer with the Colombia Action Network in Alabama addressed the crowd of thousands on Sunday and urged people to join the cause to free Lily Obando.
Another Letter to the CAN from Lily Obando
Update from CAN: Activities at the SOA
1. Colombia Action Network and Campaign for Labor Rights workshop info at the School of the Americas
2. Fight Back forum at the School of the Americas – features 2 members from the 2006 CAN delegation to Colombia
3. CAN flyer for the SOA demanding the release of Liliana (Lily) Obando, FENSUAGRO organizer, who toured for the CAN in the US in 2001
4. Attached is the petition we will be circulating demanding Liliana Obando's release
A Letter from Liliany Obando
Below is a letter we have received from Liliany (Lily) Obando who is in prison in Colombia for her political work. Lily is an organizer for FENSUAGRO, the peasant workers' union. She toured the U.S. for the Colombia Action Network in 2001. Chapin Gray will be reading this letter from the stage at the School of the Americas protest for the Colombia Action Network on Sunday.
Who to kill? Colombia army picks soldier's brother
Who to kill? Colombia army picks soldier's brother
By FRANK BAJAK, Associated Press Writer Frank Bajak, Associated Press Writer Thu Nov 13, 3:00 am ET
BOGOTA, Colombia – The soldiers in Antelope Company's Third Platoon hadn't registered a guerrilla kill in months. And without results, they feared they wouldn't be let off base for Mother's Day.
So they hatched a plan, according to Pvt. Luis Esteban Montes: Lure a civilian to their camp, murder him and register him as a rebel slain in combat.


