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03/09/2007
Para
español
Contacts: Sean
Garcia and Andrea Lari
ri@refugeesinternational.org; 202-828-0110
Violence in Colombia is continuing
and even escalating in various parts of the country, despite growing
government rhetoric that it is gaining control over the internal
conflict that has plagued the nation for the past four decades.
Refugees International (RI) teams visited Nariño and
Chocó departments in June 2006 and February 2007 and found that
security conditions have seriously worsened. As a result,
increased civilian displacement in the coming months is likely and
Government authorities are unprepared to respond adequately.
Growing Violence
Increases Displacement
Civilians continue to flee
their homes due to newly formed narco-paramilitary groups entering
their lands and ordering people to leave. The displaced are also
subject to violence upon return. Since the June 2006 displacement from
the Remolino demonstration in Nariño (see Colombia: Political Considerations Used
to Deny Assistance to Displaced People), and the subsequent return of these
communities to areas north of the provincial capital, Pasto, 70 people
have been assassinated and 17 have disappeared, confirming threats made
by paramilitaries in the area to those accompanying the returning
convoys. In February 2007, the RI team visited the municipality of
Samaniego, south of Pasto, and found that 8 people had been killed over
the course of one weekend. These deaths were attributed to a new
paramilitary group, 80 members strong, who are in the process of
establishing themselves in the town.
In addition to conflict due to
resurgent paramilitary groups, fighting has intensified for control of
strategic territory used for cultivating, harvesting, processing and
transporting coca to international markets. Samaniego, Nariño is
the site of fighting between two left-wing guerilla groups - the FARC
(Revolutionary Armed Force of Colombia) and the ELN (National
Liberation Army) over drug resources. The Bajo Baudó
region of Chocó is the scene of drug-related fighting between
the FARC and the ERG (Guevarista Revolutionary Army). Fighting for
similar reasons is also occurring between the FARC and paramilitary
groups throughout Nariño and Chocó. Multiple
reports indicate that combatants are driving entire indigenous and
Afro-descendant communities out of contested areas, a tactic that
crowds nearby villages and towns. In these contested areas used for
growing coca, the national army has also begun to bomb and fumigate as
part of its eradication program. These actions are also causing
displacement as farmers are driven from spoiled lands.
According to official figures,
violent crimes increased 13% in Nariño in 2006 in comparison to
2005. Multiple officials reported to RI that these are very
conservative figures, and they estimate that the real death toll could
be up to six times higher. Additionally, the alarming spread of new
paramilitary groups seems to have benefited from army and police
complacency, both of which are avoiding confrontation. Crimes
committed by these new armed actors remain uninvestigated and the
perpetrators impugn.
“A Time Bomb
About to Explode”
Humanitarian aid workers in
Colombia are now referring to multiple crises in the country as time
bombs. Contrary to official government statements, multiple conflicts
are raging throughout the country. The roots of these conflicts
are expanding, and do not represent only battle between government
forces and guerilla rebel groups. Rather, there is growing
violence among left-wing guerilla groups, additional fighting between
guerilla groups and resurgent paramilitary groups, and additional
conflict involving the army. As a result, civilians are being
caught between quickly changing actors – and being put at increasing
risk as different armed groups enter and leave their communities.
In Nariño, 30 massive
displacements [massive meaning displacement of more than 50 people]
happened last year with additional 8 massive displacements in the first
two months of 2007, bringing the total number of registered IDPs in the
department to more than 54.000.
On February 15 fighting between
FARC and ELN affected communities of around 2.000 people living in
rural areas northwest of the municipality of Samaniego. “This is the
second time we have been displaced this year. People are terrorized by
the fighting and some 46 families have fled their homes to seek
sanctuary in school buildings in a nearby town” said an indigenous
leader. During their stay in schools, the local municipality and the
church provided food and essential items. However, five days later,
assistance from Acción Social, the government agency mandated to
coordinate humanitarian response to the needs of displaced people, had
not arrived, and reports indicated that many families had decided to
return home for lack of assistance. These returnees found that
landmines were laid down around their village and that fighting could
erupt at any time. In the two weeks that proceeded RI’s visit to
Samaniego, 7 people had been injured or killed by a landmine or
unexploded ordinance.
A similar situation of mounting
tensions and violence also afflict communities in the San Juan and
Baudó River Valleys, and along the tributaries of the Atrato
River in the department of Chocó. On April 6, 2006 more than 700
members of 5 Wounan indigenous communities from the Medio San Juan
river basin fled their villages to seek security in the town of
Istmina. The FARC accused 14 community leaders and teachers of being
informants for the army and killed three people. The remaining people
under threat, along with their families, were evacuated by United
Nations agencies to Panama. In this instance, both local authorities
and Acción Social failed to provide minimum levels of
assistance, forcing the Church and international agencies to intervene
in order to avert a humanitarian disaster. “Four children died during
those two months because of epidemic diseases. We had to live
crammed into four small makeshift shelters, and were forced to bathe in
and cook with the polluted water of the river” said an indigenous
leader. The group finally decided that living conditions were
intolerable and opted to return to their villages. Since
returning, the FARC has enforced tight social control over the group,
and access to them has been cut off.
Throughout the month of February,
more displacement to Istmina occurred from the Sipí river basin,
caused by new paramilitary group activity, which has included multiple
orders to villagers that they leave their houses within 8 hours. One
family that was part of a group of more than 300 Afro-Colombians who
arrived in Istmina on January 4, 2007 told RI: “We received some food,
but only after 11 days, and it is not enough. No housing has been
provided for us, and we don’t feel like we have access to medical
services, education or any way to support ourselves.”
Based on solid evidence of
increasing violence throughout Colombia, Refugees International
recommends that:
The government of Colombia:
Colombia: Flaws in Registering Displaced People Leads to Denial of Services
Colombia Fails to Provide Adequate Assistance to Displaced Population
Colombian Voices: 2007 is the Year of The Rights of Internally Displaced Persons
Colombia: Mission to Assess Displacement Prior to Visit by UN High Commissioner for Refugees
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