10/11/2005
Contact: Andrea Lari
ri@refugeesinternational.org or 202.828.0110
Colombians who were forced to abandon their villages after being
targeted by armed groups are still returning to unsafe areas with
little support, leaving them under constant threat of new displacement.
The implementation of the Government of Colombia’s democratic security
policy is putting civilians in danger while civilian authorities in
charge of accompanying returnees are failing to provide them with
promised basic services. Due to the persistence of the internal
conflict in areas of return, displaced groups should have the
opportunity and support to either resettle or integrate in safe areas,
whether rural or urban. Additionally, greater support should be
provided to communities which are developing internal mechanisms to
resist displacement and opt to relocate in safer areas within their own
territory.
The Colombian Government considers return as the most preferable
solution, particularly to recent displacements. But returns must be
voluntary and implemented in full respect of the principles of safety
and dignity. Lack of economic opportunities in urban settings,
conditionality of receiving additional assistance, and excessive
leadership of the army in the promotion and implementation of the
returns are making returns a coerced process.
In September Refugees International visited several villages along the
river Buey, a tributary of the river Atrato, in the Pacific Coast
Department of Chocó. The residents had returned recently home
after living three difficult months in the city of Quibdó. One
villager told RI, “Before the displacement we were living well, we
could hunt and cultivate our land freely. In Quibdó, we had no
way to find money to survive, we did not know how to find a job in the
city.” He added, “We received food assistance for three months and then
they [the authorities] said we could only get more assistance and
compensation for what we lost if we returned home.”
The Colombian Army is taking a questionable leading role in the returns
of the displaced, which were supposed to be led by the Social
Solidarity Network, the governmental agency in charge of coordinating
the response to forced displacement. A humanitarian official said to
RI, “Returnees from Bellavista on the river Bojaya were loaded on
military boats and taken back to the villages.”
In many cases areas of return remain unsafe and communities are still
susceptible to attacks and persecution from those engaged in the
conflict: the left wing guerilla army FARC, the AUC paramilitary units
and also the national army. “We are back at home but we have a lot of
fear about what can happen. The FARC are still operating around us and
they have already killed two people of the community deeming them
informants for the Army. Army helicopters keep flying above us, and we
have heard of an imminent operation against the FARC,” a worried
villager told RI. Upon return, indigenous communities located in
the lower side of the river Atrato keep facing harassment and torture
at the hands of the paramilitaries. An indigenous activist told RI,
“The paramilitaries accuse the indigenous of being rebels. Two
[community members] were tortured by having plastic bags with water and
salt put around their heads.” The army is also jeopardizing the
security of returnees and has been accused of several wrongdoings
against civilians. Military posts are located close to houses and even
schools. In the Bajo Calima basin, the army counterinsurgency strategy
is conducted through frequent acts of intimidation and unlawful
detentions, sometimes of entire villages, where for hours people are
interrogated and subjected to degrading treatment.
The Social Solidarity Network has made progress in analyzing the return
processes, including the preparation of the Return Manual. Among other
provisions, the Manual explains that state institutions should
guarantee integrated assistance comprising security, protection,
humanitarian help, education, health, social welfare, housing,
community infrastructures, income generating activities and
strengthening the presence of the state judicial system. In reality,
however, the Colombian authorities consider the presence of the army to
be the most important condition to guarantee security. This strategy is
not working and it brings more insecurity to the communities. All
displaced people interviewed insisted that what they needed from the
Government is the reestablishment of basic social services instead. But
promises are not fulfilled. “We were told that school teachers would
return to our village but it is not happening,” mentioned a returnee of
the river Buey. Another villager insisted “they assured us that regular
visits of the medical brigade would take place. In one month, they were
here for a couple of hours, bringing very few medicines and the doctor
did not even leave the boat and wanted to visit the patients from
there.” Besides primary health and education, restarting economic
activities and access to micro-credit programs were the most requested
types of help expected by the returnees. In September the
Constitutional Court also noted the failure of the government response
to the needs of displaced people, stating that “the status of
unconstitutionality of the government policies has yet to be overcome,
the implementation has been slow and insufficient as the amount of
resources allocated to that purpose.”
Since returns in conflict affected areas are unsustainable, more
attention should be focused on alternatives, such as resettlement in
safe urban or rural areas and integration in areas of refuge, and on
preventative measures to reduce the risk of displacement. Those who
have been displaced for years and are living a life on the edge of
destitution in poor urban neighborhoods nonetheless expressed no desire
to return home. They are still afraid and guard their anonymity,
choosing not to register with the authorities for fear of being
targeted afterwards as suspected sympathizers or supporters of the
FARC. RI interviewed a displaced person in Popayan, Cauca Department
who said “I fled three years ago. Here I am selling fruits in the
street since I have no land to cultivate. I am not going back but I
also do not want to be registered, I hope to find a new house to settle
down.” In Quibdó, a leader of the displaced insisted, “We fled
from the lower Atrato few years ago and the paras [paramilitaries] have
taken our land. We won’t return. We are very bitter since we suffered
so many atrocities and humiliations. Now we have three priorities:
fight for decent housing, obtain loans to develop small size economic
activities and continue the process to claim our lands back.”
In terms of prevention, the measures so far used, such as the early
warning system managed by Ministry of Interior and Justice or the
placement of community ombudsmen, have not impeded displacement. While
all the protection emphasis has been on ensuring the presence of the
army, internally displaced persons interviewed by RI expressed instead
that what they need is the presence of the state in its social,
economic and judicial dimensions. “We never saw the state helping us
out with services or economic incentives for our work. They always send
the army.” Moreover, since after being uprooted people see their
possessions and land unlawfully occupied by others or “stolen,” they
are trying to resist displacement and move to less strategic areas
within their own territory. This is particularly true in the
Chocó Department where paramilitaries have extorted properties
and thousands of hectares of land through murders and intimidations,
turning small plots for subsistence agriculture into big African palm
oil plantations.
Therefore Refugees International recommends that:
- The Government of Colombia refrain from promoting returns
to unsafe areas. When returns are undertaken, efforts and resources
should be used to reestablish both physical and socio-economic security
of the communities while respecting the civilian nature of the process.
- The Government of Colombia urgently extend its social and
economic services to communities at risk of displacement. When
displacement occurs and returns are not feasible it should provide
alternative options such us resettlement to safe urban or rural areas.
- The Government of Colombia increase considerably funding for the
resettlement process of internally displaced people, as recently
recommended by the Constitutional Court. This includes provision of
decent housing, promotion of vocational training courses and support
for appropriate economic initiatives while making credit available.
- International donors support civil society groups and churches to
increase their presence within returned communities and groups at risk
of displacement. Accompaniment, when coupled with support to strengthen
communities’ structures and leadership, is crucial to help to develop
mechanisms to respond to displacement threats.
Andrea
Lari spent three weeks in Colombia in September looking at the
situation for internally displaced persons there.
Download a .pdf of this policy recommendation.