--- Just exactly how Corporations treat people, especially those in the third world.
Synopsis: In this feature length documentary, directors German Gutiérrez and Carmen Garcia present a searing indictment of the Coca-Cola empire and its alleged kidnapping, torture and murder of union leaders trying to improve working conditions in Colombia, Guatemala and Turkey. The filmmakers follow labour rights lawyers Daniel Kovalik and Terry Collingsworth and an activist for the Stop Killer-Coke! campaign, Ray Rogers, as they attempt to hold the giant U.S. multinational beverage company accountable in this legal and human rights battle. Listed below are union leaders at Coca-Cola's Colombian bottling plants who have been murdered. Hundreds of other Coke workers have been tortured, kidnapped and/or illegally detained by violent paramilitaries, often working closely with plant managements. Date Name Coca-Cola Plant ---- ---- --------------- 1990 Avelino Achicanoy Pasto 4/8/94 Jose Elaseasar MancoDavid Carepa 4/20/94 Luis Enrique Giraldo Arango Carepa 4/23/95 Luis Enrique Gomez Garado Carepa 12/5/96 Isidro Segundo Gil Carepa 12/26/96 Jose Librado Herrera Osorio Carepa 6/21/2001 Oscar Dario Soto Polo Monteria 8/31/2002 Adolfo de Jesus Munera Lopez Baranquilla
Not fair!!! That's not fair!!! He wants to help us and...uh...fucking government!
YULICAZ 3 months ago
We have Representative Dan Burton from Indiana who could care less about those 2 murdered union leaders. For Dan Burton, if those two murders helped keep Coca Cola labor costs down and profits up, then, it's all right. Abraham Lincoln said: "with any Republican, between the dollar and the man, the man comes before the dollar"; if he were to come back nowadays, he'd find the Republicans always putting the dollar before the man. One day, history will expose hipocrites like Dan Burton!
introduire 1 year ago