NYC Financial Disaster; Afro-Colombian Workers Repressed
WBAI Radio's Building Bridges: Your Community & Labor Report
Monday, October 6, 2008, 7 – 8 PM EST, over 99.5 FM ****************************************
NYC: Financial Disaster Ahead?
with
James Parrott Deputy Director and Chief Economist, Fiscal Policy Institute
Author, "The End of Wall Street as We Know It"
"The Colombian Free Trade Agreement, Displacement of
Afro-Colombians, and Violence against Trade Unionists"
with
Carlos RoseroFounder, Procesos de Comunidades Negras
Raul Arroyave, Executive Board Member, Central Unitaria
de Trabajadores(CUT) labor federation
Jose Schiffino, Trade Unionists in Solidarity with Colombia
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NYC: Financial Disaster Ahead?
with
James Parrott, Deputy Director and Chief Economist, Fiscal Policy Institute
Author, "The End of Wall Street as We Know It"
Employers cut 159,000 jobs in Sept.. It was the biggest monthly decline
since 2003 and new evidence of a strengthening recession. The NYC
financial industry, one of the cornerstones of the NYC economy and a
mainstay of the City and State's tax base, may be heading for a long
term decline. The financial crisis has already claimed Bear Stearns,
Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers and AIG. The NYS Labor Department
is predicting the loss of 120,000 jobs and is asking for Federal Aid. ************************************************
The Colombian Free Trade Agreement, Displacement of
Afro-Colombians, and Violence against Trade Unionists"
with
Carlos RoseroFounder, Procesos de Comunidades Negras
Raul Arroyave, Executive Board Member, Central Unitaria
de Trabajadores(CUT) labor federation
Jose Schiffino, Trade Unionists in Solidarity with Colombia
Thousands of predominately Afro-Colombian sugarcane workers are on
strike, calling for basic minimum wage & safety standards. The
companies have refused to negotiate and instead sent in state troops
resulting in at least 33 injuries. Violence is also accelerating in the forced
removal of Afro-Colombian communal farmers from their land to make way
for massive palm oil plantations. All this on the heels of the Colombian
government's lobbying blitz in Washington, in a last ditch effort for the U.S.
Congress to pass the Colombia Free Trade Agreement. ************************************************
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