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COLOMBIA:
Civilians Caught
in Crossfire of Anti-Drug
Operation
Constanza
Vieira
BOGOTA, (IPS) - An
unprecedented military campaign
to eradicate coca crops in a
central Colombian national park
has placed 2,500 families in the
line of fire between
counterinsurgency forces and
leftist guerrillas.
The operation was launched by
right-wing President Álvaro
Uribe in response to one of the
most resounding military defeats
ever dealt to the government
security forces by the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC), the country's
largest rebel group..
On Dec. 27, FARC rebels killed
29 soldiers in the municipality
of Vista Hermosa, located 200 km
south of Bogotá, just outside La
Macarena National Park, a World
Natural Heritage site.
Escorted by 1,500 police
officers, over 900 farmers began
moving into the 690,000-hectare
nature preserve on Wednesday,
after being hired by the
government to pull up coca
plants growing in the park by
hand.
Coca leaf is used to manufacture
cocaine, an illegal drug that is
one of the FARC's sources of
income.
The army has deployed 6,000
troops, as well as 15 fighter
helicopters and a plane to
intercept communications,
resources that form part of Plan
Patriot, the second stage of
Plan Colombia. Both of these
anti-drug and counterinsurgency
initiatives are financed and
assisted by the United States.
Once the operation is completed,
within an estimated four months,
the government plans to
"relocate" some 5,000 peasant
families from the area, although
officials have not specified how
this will be carried out.
The government maintains that
there are 4,600 hectares of coca
plants growing inside La
Macarena National Park, which it
plans to have pulled up by hand.
In addition, crop-dusting planes
will be used to spray herbicide
on another 12,000 hectares on
the outskirts of the preserve.
Eleven United Nations observers
will oversee the operation.
Their mission will be to measure
the coca areas cleared by the
workers and to report to the
Colombian government and
international community on the
progress of the operation, said
Sandro Calvani, the
representative in Colombia of
the United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime (UNODC).
According to press reports,
there were armed battles in the
area last week, and numerous
settlements were abandoned by
their inhabitants. It has also
been reported that landmines
proliferate in the area where
the clearing operation began
Wednesday.
In addition to the government
security forces and leftist
guerrilla groups, the
decades-long conflict in
Colombia also involves
ultra-right-wing paramilitary
organisations that claim to act
in support of the government,
and which also use drug
trafficking as a means of
financing.
After controversial negotiations
with Uribe, the right-wing
paramilitary groups -- whom the
UN identifies as responsible for
80 percent of the crimes against
humanity and massacres committed
in the Colombian civil war --
have partially demobilised their
members and turned over some of
their weapons.
According to official sources,
civilians hired by the
government to rip up coca
plants, always with the
protection of police or army
escorts, eradicated 32,000
hectares of the illegal crop in
2005.
The day after the Dec. 27 FARC
attack in Vista Hermosa, Uribe
also ordered "the capture of
militia members in this entire
area... because we have found
that there is a vast urban
militia aiding these
terrorists," as he consistently
refers to the rebel group of
peasant origins dating to 1964.
According to conservative
estimates, there are roughly
46,000 FARC combatants
throughout Colombia, who are
aided in logistics by some
10,000 militia members. The FARC
itself says it has the support
of around two million Colombian
civilians across the country.
At least two men and one woman,
a mother of five, were
reportedly killed by
paramilitaries on Jan. 5 in the
area around La Macarena National
Park.
"It was claimed that they were
guerrillas, militia members,"
said a campesino (peasant
farmer) from the region who
would identify himself only as a
member of the human rights
commission of 32 Juntas de
Acción Comunal (JACs, Community
Action Councils) on the Güéjar
River, which flows east from its
source inside the park.
"But for us, the grassroots,
they were leaders and members of
a JAC, they belonged to workers'
guilds, a branch of the JACs
legally recognised by the
Interior Ministry," the source
told IPS.
An open letter to Uribe signed
by the Human Rights Monitoring
Committee of the region's JACs
and six other human rights
organisations, calls for
clarification of "the government
forces' interpretation of the
category of 'militia members'
and the necessary
differentiation from the
civilian population living in
areas of armed conflict."
With regard to the massacre
earlier this month, the letter
added that "the local residents
were able to identify among the
attackers members of government
forces who have participated in
the army patrols in the region."
The letter further stressed that
the killings took place five
minutes away from a military
guard post mounted by Plan
Patriot troops, and that in the
department (state) of Meta,
which borders on the national
park, there is a "generalised"
belief that "the dividing line
between the army and the
paramilitaries is non-existent."
Moreover, between 11 and 15
people taken into custody by the
army, and subsequently released
in Vista Hermosa under pressure
from human rights groups, remain
missing. They include an
11-year-old boy.
"Since the urban centre of Vista
Hermosa is totally overrun with
paramilitaries, we believe that
they took them out of town and
murdered them," Jairo Ramírez,
executive secretary of the
Permanent Committee for Human
Rights, told IPS. The Committee
was one of the organisations
that signed the letter, along
with the José Alvear Restrepo
Attorneys Collective and the
Inter-Ecclesiastic Justice and
Peace Commission, among others.
"The paramilitaries in Vista
Hermosa are 50 metres from the
military guard post. They live
in a house that is owned by the
regional authorities, and carry
out their operations from there.
There are around 30 or 40
paramilitaries under the command
of Mr. Tino, a paramilitary
leader based in Piñalito," a
neighbouring town, explained the
anonymous peasant.
Military operations led to the
displacement of 280 residents
from the nearby village of
Matambú and between 220 and 260
from neighbouring Puerto Toledo,
"although we know that some have
returned," said Ramírez.
In December, missions made up by
representatives of human rights
groups simultaneously visited
two different places in Colombia
where Plan Patriot is being
implemented: the department of
Guaviare, on the northern fringe
of the Amazon jungle, and the
area bordering La Macarena.
In both areas, the mission
members reported "the terrible
impact that the military
operation has had on the
civilian population, " according
to the open letter.
Among the abuses documented by
the missions were "murders,
disappearances, torture, forced
displacement, threats, theft,
robbery, obstruction of food
supplies, and the burning of
food."
They also reported "the burning
of motor vehicles, lack of
respect for the right to free
movement, arbitrary arrests, and
many other irregularities
committed against the
population" in the name of Plan
Patriot and the government's
security policy, declared the
signatories, who stressed that
all of these abuses "remain
unpunished and hidden from the
country."
They called on Uribe to define
"whether the military
confrontation he has declared is
between the national army and
the rebel forces or rather,
between the national army and
the unarmed general population."
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