A
Year In Hell For 1,000 Dollars
A Month
By Ángel Páez
07 November, 2007
Inter
Press Service
LIMA, Nov 6 (IPS) - Former
Peruvian noncommissioned army officer Norman Alfonso Solano is happy
because he has once again been recruited to work as a private security
guard in one of the most dangerous places in the world: Iraq.
Although he saw fellow security
guards killed by the Iraqi resistance when he was working in the southern
Iraqi city of Basra, Solano clenched his teeth and told himself, "I
need the money." This time he is heading to Baghdad.
The robust 46-year-old 1.80-metre
tall Solano forms part of a new contingent of former members of the
Peruvian armed forces and police who will guard U.S. installations in
Iraq for a year in exchange for a hefty paycheck, by Peruvian standards:
1,000 dollars a month.
"I earn 200 dollars
a month here, and that’s when I manage to find work," said
Solano, a veteran of the 1980-2000 counterinsurgency war against the
Maoist Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) guerrillas.
"I have four kids. I'm
an expert in weapons and am trained for war. That's why I have to go
where there is war," he told IPS.
The U.S. private military
company Triple Canopy, which has drawn criticism for taking advantage
of the high unemployment and low wages in Peru to recruit workers, has
been hiring former members of Peru’s security forces to work in
Iraq for the past several years. It also hires workers from Chile, Colombia
and El Salvador.
The firm was founded in 2003
by former members of the U.S. army's elite Delta Force. Thanks to contacts
in the George W. Bush administration, it quickly won lucrative contracts
with the State Department.
Like other private security
firms, Triple Canopy provides bodyguard and site security services to
U.S. infrastructure and personnel in Iraq, which has been occupied by
the United States since March 2003.
In Peru, the availability
of poor, well-trained potential applicants with combat experience is
so broad that Triple Canopy has opened an office in Lima: TCLA Internacional,
run by U.S. citizens Jay Franklin Bryant, Armand Leon Gadoury and Herbert
Terrence Williams.
Hiring here was previously
carried out by another firm, Defion Internacional. But Triple Canopy
decided to do the recruiting in its own name, TCLA general manager Hugo
Cobos told IPS.
"We no longer have any
links with Defion. This is a completely new company," said Cobos.
But he declined to provide further details of TCLA’s activities.
"It is company policy
to only give out information in response to an official request. You
send us a letter with the doubts that you would like us to clear up,
we will send it on to corporate headquarters in the United States, and
they will respond. It'll take a week for you to receive a response,
at the most," he said.
But although IPS followed
these instructions, no response was ever received.
Authorities in Peru estimate
that at least 1,600 Peruvians have been hired by U.S. companies to work
in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2005. However, that figure is only approximate,
because the firms are under no obligation to report on their activities.
"In the Ministry of
Foreign Relations, we have no list of names of Peruvians who have left
the country to work in security in Iraq or any other conflict zone,"
Enrique Bustamante, head of the Secretariat of Peruvian Communities
Abroad, told IPS.
"In order for us to
keep records, the companies that hire them or the hired security guards
themselves would have to voluntarily provide us with information. There
is no statute or law requiring them to do so," he said.
Solano worked in Basra from
Dec. 5, 2005 to Jan. 18, 2006. "This was the agreement: they paid
me 100 dollars directly and sent the remaining 900 dollars to my family,"
he explained.
"There were many really
tense days, very dangerous. I witnessed mortar attacks by the Iraqi
resistance and saw fellow employees from other countries shot dead and
Peruvian colleagues seriously injured," he said.
"But the money I saved
up has run out," he went on. "So I applied, and they told
me to get my documents ready because they’re putting together
another contingent to be sent over."
"Yeah, I'm going to
work for Triple Canopy again, like the first time. I can't complain;
things went really well for me."
Norman’s brother is
midfielder Norberto Solano, who has made a name for himself in English
football and forms part of Peru’s national team.
"My brother’s
a millionaire, and he likes football. I'm not a millionaire, I'm a soldier,
I like war and I need money," he said.
The Triple Canopy recruiters
did not hesitate to hire him as soon as he applied: he served in the
army from 1978 to 1986, and has ample combat experience. He took part
in the brief 1995 border skirmish with Ecuador, and in counterinsurgency
operations against Sendero Luminoso in the 1980s.
"I left the army because
I had a family to support and the pay was bad. I worked in different
security companies for years. I was a supervisor and instructor, but
when the war against terrorism ended, there wasn't much work available,
and I found myself unemployed until I heard from some friends that they
were recruiting people for Iraq," he said.
"My family begged me
not to take the risk. The news coming from over there was really alarming.
But it was a chance I couldn't pass up. It was worth risking my neck."
Several Peruvian security
guards who have come back with injuries have protested over the lack
of medical insurance and compensation. According to a copy of a contract
to which IPS had access, the employee agrees that any claim to reparations
must be filed at the Fairfax district court in the U.S. state of Virginia,
where Triple Canopy is based.
The question is, how many
Peruvians could make the trip to the United States, or afford a U.S.
lawyer?
"What we are suggesting
is that the recruits register with us voluntarily, for us to have an
idea of how many have gone abroad and how we can contact them, and for
us to keep a list of their relatives here, instead of waiting for a
tragedy to happen before we take action," said Bustamante.
The government is unaware
of how many Peruvians have been shipped overseas to take part in foreign
wars, and it is even less aware of how many have been injured or have
received compensation, insurance or medical care, because the contracts
contain a confidentiality clause.
In January, members of a
mission from the United Nations working group on the use of mercenaries,
headed by chairperson-rapporteur Amada Benavides de Pérez, told
IPS that they had received reports that the Peruvian recruits were going
beyond the work of mere security guards and received training in firing
weapons and at times had used their guns.
Bustamante was careful not
to refer to the Peruvian recruits as "mercenaries", "because
they are hired as security guards. It is a bit bold to use that term
to describe people who are going over to guard institutions. Do we call
people who work here in security ‘mercenaries’ just because
they carry weapons and use armoured vehicles?"
Nor would it be possible
to keep these firms from recruiting here, or to prevent Peruvians from
working in war zones. "We as a state cannot make that decision.
Individuals are free to take the jobs they choose and assume their own
risks, and the state cannot adopt measures that go against their free
will," he said.
"During my stay in Basra,
we were the targets of around 450 attacks with explosives," said
Solano. "We carried M4 and AKM assault rifles and M240 machine
guns. We generally only fired warning shots. There was a lot of tension,
especially when the enemy was firing mortars. We had a nasty sensation
of being trapped or shut in. Fear was just something you lived with
all the time."
One of the worst cases of
injuries was that of Richard Misarayme, 24. "We prayed for him
because it looked like he was going to die. But he made it through,"
Solano recalled.
What did he do with the 12,000
dollars he earned in Basra? Asked IPS.
"I built a house for
my family and paid for my children’s schooling," he said.
"It was a veritable fortune, and it’s not every day that
a chance comes along to earn that kind of money. It would have taken
me years to save up here. That's why I'm going back to Iraq. I make
my living off of war, and as long as there’s war, I'll keep doing
so."
Copyright © 2007 IPS-Inter
Press Service.
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