I'm connected to the clothing sector. It's an organization, like Leonisa, that has 1,800 mothers and heads of households. We export 40% of our production. If we do not reach agreements with countries of the north that are more developed and that accept our production, then the situation for us will be pretty complicated. It's not easy to have the technology. We don't have that high level of development in the manufacturing industry. That's why we want things to be clear.
In Colombia, there are two central unions. Numerically, CUT is the majority, but qualitatively speaking, connected to the production sector, it's SCT. Among our leaders, some say no to the free trade agreement. Within the SCT this has given rise to an inter-institutional team comprising employers and workers and the state itself. Most of those involved are the employers and workers who would be directly affected if a free trade agreement were not signed.
A free trade agreement is a business by which interests are negotiated. I think Canada and the United States and Colombia are interested in establishing guidelines in the trade relationship. We're very grateful for the fact that you are demanding, in the final documents, that there be defence of human rights and the right to free association, because this is the way we can grow.
We need to grow as an industry. We grow if there's employment. If there's employment, there are workers. This is an opportunity to organize workers into unions.
For example, one of the requirements has been eradicating child labour. The right to strike, the right of Colombia in terms of agreements.... It's a request from us to you that these agreements be supported and that these agreements be fulfilled.
The fact is that we share some positions of the government, and we fight for security. We're not part of the government, as some sectors against the free trade agreement want to say. We're not at all similar. We have our political will to fight for the defence of the national industry to guarantee thousands of jobs that should remain, will remain, in Colombia.