Crop substitution programs were central to the 2016 peace deal: Their slow progress and government indifference has left leaders in a precarious position.

Attempts to deal with illicit crops affect many stakeholders; illegal groups respond to this possibility with violence against social leaders promoting crop substitution like Gloria Ocampo (l) and Plinio Pulgarin (r). The government is preference is the aerial spraying of crops with harmful pesticides.

For more than five decades Colombia has lived through an internal armed conflict that has atrociously violated the human rights of thousands of people. Faced with this situation, the Colombian State, after several decades of blood and pain, decided to sign an agreement with one of these armed groups (The FARC-EP guerrilla movement) that have caused so much damage in the country. The signing was desired by half of the Colombian population based on the 2016 plebiscite on the issue. This agreement sought, in the first instance, to put an end to the armed  conflict and, at the same time, to carry out reforms that would help ensure the transition of all armed actors to civil society. It also focused on creating structural changes in the areas of civil society most affected by the conflict. Vulnerable and marginalized territories of society that suffered killings, disappearances, rape and constant threats to their well-being. Most of these communities have been affected by a common factor, illicit crops. According to the peace agreement, the persistence of these illicit crops is linked to the existence of conditions of poverty, marginalization, weak institutional presence, as well as the existence of criminal organizations dedicated to drug trafficking. For this reason, one of the important points of the agreement is the “illicit crop substitution program” (PNIS for its initials in Spanish), which basically focuses on assisting communities with the presence of illicit crops, to help them, economically and socially, to make the transition from the planting of illicit crops to the planting of food crops that allow a stable and lasting economic development in these territories historically abandoned by the state. Unfortunately, since the signing of the agreements, the implementation of this point has been an almost impossible task. The absence of the FARC-EP has been replaced by the presence of other illegal groups that have filled the power vacuum and renewed the FARC’s illicit activities. This is because drug trafficking, especially cocaine, is a billion-dollar business that has served to finance the war of the armed groups against the Colombian government. For this reason, the crop substitution program has made little progress, and in the process, many Colombians have lost their lives. Furthermore, the government of current president Ivan Duque has chosen to tackle the issue of illicit crops with aerial spraying of pesticides; an approach with serious environmental and health implications.This article will focus on explaining in depth and in detail what the illicit crop substitution program (PNIS) is, analyzing the consequences that this agreement has had and its degree of compliance. It will also analyze the effects on civil society, such as the violation of human rights and its derivatives. To achieve this, we will  study the statistics of people who have been killed trying to defend their territories, and the role of social leaders, as well as the position of the Colombian government regarding  these cases. 

The peace agreement marked the end of the longest war in the history of Colombia. It was expected that this would open a new chapter in the country which would hopefully for the first time in 50 years, live in peace. However,  far from this era of peace, what has occurred is a new wave of violence. Since the signing of the peace agreement, the most affected actors in terms of violence have been social leaders and human rights defenders. But what is a social leader and what is a human rights defender? According to Amnesty International, a social leader is a person recognized by his or her community for leading, coordinating or supporting collective processes or activities that positively affect the life of his or her community, improve and dignify their living conditions or build social fabric (2020). On the other hand, human rights defenders are responsible for defending and promoting the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms at the local, national and international level (Amnesty International, 2020). Sadly, human rights defenders have suffered systematic persecution for their work since the signing of the peace accords, with Human Rights Watch commenting that these people have been assassinated for supporting or participating in projects to replace coca crops – the raw material of cocaine – for food crops (2021). These crimes have affected nearly every department of Colombia, some worse than others such as the case of Cauca or Choco. However, the Caribbean region has also seen a constant wave of violence in certain sub-regions since the agreement was signed in 2016.

Before the signing of the agreement, the departments of Bolivar, Cordoba, and Cesar had suffered due to the presence of illegal groups. This is due to the fact that in these territories there has always been illicit crop cultivation, which has helped all these groups to finance their war against the state and to profit economically from this market. For this reason, it is not surprising that since the signing of the peace accords, these territories have been the most affected in terms of violence. The reinsertion of the FARC into civil society resulted in a power vacuum in these areas abandoned by the state, which other armed groups and dissidents were happy to fill. The interest in this area, coca cultivation, has caused the murder and disappearance of thousands of people. This is why the implementation of the agreement, and more specifically, the illicit crop substitution program, has brought so much bloodshed. Replacing coca crops with food has been an impossible task. Most of the people who have historically grown coca  were small scale farmers, owners of small plots of land or simply civilians in these territories who had to support their families in some way, since the state did not and historically has not taken care of them. Many of these coca growers were enthusiastic about the peace agreement, and the crop substitution program, since it offered them a path to more formal production and in theory, would offer them more security as they would not be dependent on violent illegal groups for their livelihood. However, as was mentioned previously, several other illegal groups moved quickly to replace the FARC in the territories they had controlled. These groups see crop substitution as a threat to their business interests and as such, there has been a sharp rise in violence against those involved in crop substitution. According to UNCaribe, between November 2016 and July 2018, 31 leaders were killed in the Caribbean region. In 2019, citing “La Silla Vacia”, 15 social leaders were killed in the Caribbean Region, and finally in 2020, based on Indepaz, at least 31 more cases were reported (UNCaribe, 2020). However, it is also important to highlight that in addition to the hectares of coca crops and the substitution program, there are other causes that promote the systematic violation of human rights in this region. In the first place, we found that violence against these people takes place in territories where illegal armed groups (ELN guerrillas, AGC or Clan del Golfo, ACSN or the Pachencas and Los Caparros being the chief protagonists in the region) are present. Secondly, in these territories, for some time now, there have been different local wars between insurgent groups seeking criminal hegemony or territorial control. And thirdly, the weak institutional presence of the State that has been filled by other actors that have caused only terror. The killings of social leaders represents one of the most visible consequences of this situation.

While the statistics mentioned above demonstrate the scale of the problem both nationally and regionally, it is also necessary to look at individual cases. We can talk about three specific cases, including  cases both at the national level and in the Caribbean region.It is important to know about these types of cases in order to see how these problems are reflected in society, to know a little more about the reality that many families have to live without the protection of the State. First, taking into account the research of La paz en el terreno, we will discuss the case of Gloria Ocampo who was a social leader who guided the processes of substitution of illicit crops in Putumayo. She was murdered in La Estrella, a village in the municipality of Puerto Guzmán, Putumayo. She had been  the secretary of the Junta de Acción Comunal (Communal Action Boards; micro-organisations representing the interests of small communities) in the village of La Estrella. The victim had participated as a delegate of the Development Plans with a Territorial Approach, a program born in the Peace Accord aimed at 170 municipalities in the country that have suffered high levels of violence. Two men came to the door of her house asking for Gloria and murdered her and an elderly man in front of her 12-year-old daughter and her husband. No one has been punished for this crime and authorities presume that the crime was planned by illegal armed groups. One such example  from the Caribbean region was Plinio Jose Pulgarin, who was a member of the Association of Farmers of Southern Córdoba and a leader of the Community Action Board of the San Pedrito village in San José de Uré. He, since 2012, had worked with the community for the substitution of illicit crops and was waiting for the approval of a project where he intended to evaluate new crop possibilities to replace coca. On January 18, 2018, in the midst of a territorial dispute between the Clan del Golfo/AGC  and ‘Los Caparrapos’, armed men entered Pulgarin’s house and killed him. The two groups mentioned  are among the illegal structures currently disputing territorial control in the region. They are armed groups that are part of the country’s internal armed conflict and carry out massacres, assassinations, extortion, forced displacements and run drug trafficking and illegal mining businesses. Before shooting him, the men, who wore army fatigues,  enquired about his participation in the eradication of coca crops and his support for the peace process with the FARC. After this event,133 families were displaced; 425 people living in the villages of Alto Mira San Perito, Trapichero, La Ilusión and part of the Embera Katío indigenous community of Dochamá were forced to flee their homes due to concerns over their safety. Following Pulgarin’s murder, the Clan del Golfo/AGC  issued a statement saying it had not been the perpetrator of the crime. But according to the commander of Police Region 6, the illegal organisation was indeed the perpetrator of the crime. Another case that caused a great commotion in the country was that of Manuel Osuna, 67 years old, who was found decapitated in the scorched wreck of his house. Manuel had  worked with the Association of Farmers of Southern Cordoba (ASCSUCOR), was a land defender and also worked on crop substitution issues. To conclude, it is clear that  these cases are nothing more than a collateral effect of a set of policies that have affected the entire Colombian population for many years. These communities placed their hopes on a peace agreement which does not enjoy the support of the government which signed it. They  have no support or help from the State and their lives are in daily danger for defending their lands and rights.

So what has been the state’s response to these violations. On account of the murders of social leaders, the UN has investigated the situation of social leaders in Colombia, meaning detailed reports on the situation are delivered from the UN human rights department, which puts Colombia in everyone’s sights. Since 2020 the country has developed a CONPES document, a document created by the national council for social economic policy; this council serves as an advisor to the government in the development of the country and is the document that gives rise to public policies. In this case,the interior ministry will work at the national level together with the council. This plan will have an emphasis on the different affected regions, which is why it will work in alliance with the mayors, governors, police forces and control entities of each region of the country, according to El Tiempo (2020). The President directly controls information, in order to take the most effective measures, thus joining the national protection unit and the  early warning protection system; in theory having 3 programs to protect leaders. Apart from the UN, multiple organizations have made recommendations to the government on this issue. Human Rights Watch suggested in a report that Colombia: “Start a process with genuine participation of civil society organizations and international human rights and humanitarian organizations that operate in Colombia to simplify and reinforce the prevention and protection mechanisms provided for in Colombian law, including the reform or repeal of ineffective mechanisms that have an unclear mandate “(HRW, 2020). Furthermore,  we consider that the state should establish a true institutional  presence in the zones and have much more effective protection plans and mechanisms, either by creating new ones or improving the current ones. The reaction of society is also vital, because the more noise is made, the more attention will be paid to this issue, positioning it at the top of the political agenda.

To conclude, it is important to note that despite the existence of a signed peace agreement in Colombia, more efforts are still required. These efforts should come not only from the government, which must guarantee at all costs the full compliance of all points and the security of the citizens affected by it, but also from civil society, which has the enormous responsibility to raise its voice against all these violations, because what happens in Colombia concerns us all equally. On the other hand, it is a priority that the government works hard to promote the security of the leaders who have been affected by agreeing to voluntarily opting for the  substitution of illicit crops. It is vital to remember that most of these people are in marginalized territories abandoned by the state. Therefore, the presence of the state in these departments must be a fact. Another solution to the problem concerning the substitution of illicit crops is the decriminalization of drugs in Colombia. The legalization of these substances could be key not only to ending drug trafficking, but could also serve to eliminate Colombia’s armed groups from their primary source of financing. This would lead directly to the eradication of these crops and the pressures to which civilians in these territories are subjected. Unfortunately, Colombia is far from implementing this idea, and on the contrary continues to penalize and persecute those in contact with illegal drugs, despite the growing move towards decriminalisation in other parts of the world. Colombian society must advance in terms of culture and civility to be able to even think about embracing this possibility. To conclude, although the road ahead is still long, it does not mean that it is impossible. Just as the government has the task of complying with the agreement and exercising its role, we as civil society also have the mission of denouncing and being the voice of many who have violently and unjustly lost theirs.

*Article written by Melissa Martinez, Paula Pinedo & Victor Ramirez

References

https://www.hrw.org/report/2021/02/10/left-undefended/killings-rights-defenders-colombias-remote-communities    (Human Rights Watch 2021 Colombia report)

https://reliefweb.int/report/colombia/situation-human-rights-colombia-report-united-nations-high-commissioner-human-rights   (UN High Commissioner for Human Rights 2020 report)

  (Amnesty International 2020 report on human rights defenders in Colombia)

https://www.cinep.org.co/Home2/component/k2/655-informe-cuales-son-los-patrones-asesinato-de-lideres-sociales-en-el-post-acuerdo.html     (2018 report exploring patterns across violence towards social leaders)

https://www.uninorte.edu.co/documents/12067923/14752905/Los+cuatro+conflictos+del+Caribe+-+Informe+del+primer+semestre+(2020).pdf/6babd784-dec2-4b44-a1b5-d49b9c02de90 (UNCaribe report on four conflict zones of Caribbean region)

Insight crime, crop substitution 

https://www.revistas.una.ac.cr/index.php/derechoshumanos/article/view/11908

https://lapazenelterreno.com/especiales/lideres-sustitucion/

Violence against trade union activists in Colombia: An old problem which refuses to go away.

Murdered trade union representatives Alcides Cotes Jurado (L) and Hernán Ayala Melo (R).

Four years have passed since Colombia signed the Final Peace Agreement to end almost fifty years of war that left a huge impact on the history of the country and on millions of Colombians who today are still victims of violence, and who are experiencing a far from perfect peace. 

The Colombian State intends to continue making policies that address the problem of drugs, terrorism, and a commitment to the defense and promotion of human rights. However, within the framework of social leaders, it is quite simple to discern that this is not being accomplished. The activity of the leaders is constantly affected by the clash with the private interests of other groups such as the paramilitaries and guerrilla dissidents. The growing political polarization in Colombia concerning the implementation of peace policies shows that the fractures in Colombian politics and the extremely weak responses from the government only intensify the magnitude of risk to which Colombian social leaders are exposed every day. 

In Colombia, getting involved in certain roles within economic, political, and particularly social fields is quite dangerous. Within this outlook, acting as a social leader positions you in a vastly vulnerable situation within Colombian society. During the last few years, anywhere between four hundred and nine hundred social leaders from various communities and roles have been murdered at the hands of various actors, among which neo-paramilitary groups stand out. Initially, it is essential to be clear about the context that surrounds the specific type of leaders on which this project is focused: trade union leaders. According to the British employment law company Castle Associates: “In the workplace, a trade union representative is an employee who will represent and defend the rights of workers.”(2017). These leaders are the ones who act in the name of the trade union, and they seek to mediate efficient responses to their demands. 

This type of work means that on occasion, the position of the trade union is seen as contrary to the interests of the business. This dynamic means that in the international context, trade union representatives may face threats and violence. Colombian trade union representatives focus on projects related to supporting the human rights activities of Colombian workers, providing funds for workers’ organizations, and establishing relations with international workers’ organizations, etc. This is why their work is so dangerous. By defending these interests they collide with the private interests of others, and a threat emerges. In some cases, illegality is part of this dispute, and the risk concerning the life and integrity of these leaders increases. As a consequence, the exercise of this work has resulted in large numbers of murders over the years.

As reported by the 2019 Survey of Violations of Trade Union Rights: “During 2019, CUT Colombia reported twelve murders, one hundred ninety-eight death threats, eleven acts of intimidation, four attempted murders and one forced disappearance, amounting to a total of two hundred twenty-six acts of violence directly targeting workers and union leaders.”(2019). These alarming figures not only show the cruel circumstances of the leaders, but also the distinctive  types of violence to which they are subjected. 

However, it is crucial to broaden the scope to have a better understanding of the historical context of violence towards trade union workers. According to the National Trade Union School (ENS) when talking specifically about Trade Union leaders, it is necessary to understand that these have been the class  of leaders who have most been in danger historically throughout Colombian history, the history of the country where 63% of worldwide murders of trade unionists are committed. This indicates to us how deadly trade union work has been not only during this government but throughout the recent history of the country.

Now, in addition to the general examination of the statistics of violence against trade unionists within the general framework of social leaders, it is necessary to establish a more concise and specific study within the cases of union leaders who have been killed. In Colombia, the murder of social leaders has been normalized as an unpunished crime that apparently shows no signs of ceasing but neither will it  be given enough spotlight to rally  sufficient people regarding  how alarming this gravely problematic situation really is. For this reason,  understanding and sharing the stories of leaders killed may help to generate more empathy and a call for justice on behalf of the general population. One of those leaders was Alcides de Jesús Cotes Jurado, a member of the Complaints and Claims Commission of the Union of Security Transport Workers (Sintravalores), who was assassinated on April 14 2016, while he was supplying a Bancolombia ATM in Santa Marta. Alcides had suffered harassment and threats from his boss who had told him that he should “take care of himself on the street” if he did not resign from the union. Hernán Ayala Melo was another such victim. He had worked for nineteen years at Inpec (security force in charge of prisons) and was head of the Judicial Police of the Cúcuta prison until his murder on October 23, 2018. Hernán had been targeted for his union activism; he had discovered irregular procedures in prison and had reported death threats against him. There has been no justice  in either case (AIL, 2020). 

Following the same thread, the numbers regarding  trade union leaders speak for themselves, and yet, even though the murder rates are already high enough to reflect the country’s indifference in ensuring and protecting the rights of its people, this only belongs to a small fraction of the injustices within the context of violence against social leaders and human rights defenders in the country. According to the latest report from  Colombia’s interior minister, citing data from the Chief Prosecutor’s Office and the National Police in collaboration with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, we find that there were around 370 homicides of social leaders between 2016 and mid-March 2020 (Colombia Peace, 2020). Moreover, across a similar timespan, the INDEPAZ institute shows an even higher figure: 872 murders between January 1, 2016, and September 8, 2019, and last year alone, the institute had more than 251 murders, with Cauca (84) and Antioquia (26) being the most affected departments. This means that, on average, according to Indepaz figures, in 2020 each week six defenders were killed.

The most striking characteristic in this phenomenon is actually how there remains  a space for the unknown. The reasons why statistics tend to vary a lot is because of the increasingly common nature of cases leading to an inability on behalf of some organisations to effectively verify attacks; this leads to underestimated figures of the number of murders. More than half of the estimated cases have happened in “municipalities with illicit economies where criminal groups or armed groups operate” (Colombia Peace, 2020) and no matter how little humanity there is within such acts, it is often easy for some to assume that those killed were related to coca crops and drug trafficking as opposed to social leaders since sometimes those people responsible of the murders are not made public because of fear and threats or because they are strategically removed. 

Unfortunately, one of the multiple reasons why it is so difficult to expect basic respect and justice for human rights defenders’ lives is because they are unfairly having to shoulder the burden of the bad decisions and weak structure that the Colombian government has been displaying  for numerous years. It can not simply be ignored how 86% of the murder reports occurred in villages with a poverty rate above the national average (Colombia Peace, 2020). Similarly, there is little focus on how because of the power vacuum, illegal groups have decided to take over their territories, and even exploit them for illegal work activities. The government can not simply expect an agreement on paper alone to solve the many problems which allow these dynamics to exist and thrive. What is needed is true commitment to working in partnership with these long overlooked communities. Communities which face the worst of this wave of violence throughout the country.  In the end, just focusing on statistics and possibilities will not explain the reason why these killings are happening in the first place.

In this sense, bearing in mind how serious and alarming the situation is regarding murders and harassment of Trade Union Leaders in Colombia is, it is necessary to consider the institutional responses to the current circumstances and how effective they have been. One of the Colombian government’s first actions on this issue was the result of international pressure from labor and human rights organizations on internal institutions. These numerous criticisms led to the establishment of a “Plan of Action Related to Labor Rights” (Plan de Acción Laboral), in which the government committed to targeting the attacks and killings of trade unionists and to bring justice to the victims, intending  to protect workers’ rights. Furthermore, as the AFL-CIO reported, the peace agreement with the FARC is another response to the violence against trade unionists that must be taken into account. This is because even though different government representatives promised to end the violence since 2016, investigations and complaints have been generated, and there has been a wide violation of work commitments and guarantees (“Murdered Trade Unionists: The Truth Behind Colombia’s Trade Agreement | AFL-CIO,” 2019). As was noted above, the agreement on paper means little without the commitment of all necessary parties.

In this context of recent responses and critics, it is worthy to look at some  older political and security measures, but ones which are consolidated in the state for the defense of union leaders. According to the defense ministry, since 1999 in Colombia, the Ministry of Social Protection has established a high investment figure for the protection of the members of the workers’ unions, because even then there were signs of violence and persecution. With this investment, three committees  of Regulation and Evaluation of Risk were established in the legal and political institutions of the country, and one of them specialized in trade union representative cases. This program of protection developed two types of measures: The Political Measures and the Security Measures. The first ones are related to the public recognition of activities in favour of human rights and the establishment of meetings, within the state and with civil society. The second one is more related to  structure and elements which can be helpful to preserve the life and integrity of leaders in danger; such as communication devices, transport and mobilization, bulletproof vests, and others. Besides these security measures, one of the government’s most important advances in protecting trade union lives was the creation of the National Protection Unit (UNP) in 2011, which led to an expansion of the coverage of the number of protected leaders, an increment in risk studies, and the implementation of measures to speed up the response to protection requests (Escuela Nacional Sindical, 2018). 

Moreover, in March 2016, the UNP pointed out that some of its main achievements have been: the User Attention Group, the participation of the labor unions in CERREM, and the participation in the Commission of Human Rights of Workers (Escuela Nacional Sindical, 2018). 

However, without ignoring the efforts of the Colombian government to respond to violence against union leaders, it is undeniable that these have been insufficient because it has not yet been possible to carry out profound transformations in the operational and institutional perspective. Leaders continue to be targeted and killed throughout the country despite these added security measures. Therefore, it is necessary to continue constructing the analysis, needing to consider which responses may be more effective according to trade union leaders and their organizations.

Taking into account everything mentioned in the previous paragraphs, many international and national actors have analyzed the situation and given recommendations on what should be done to stop the massacres and assassinations of social leaders, human rights defenders, and defenders of workers’ rights in Colombia. One example of such international actors is the United Nations and its High Commissioner for Human Rights, which periodically sends rapporteurs to Colombia to monitor the development in terms of the defense of human rights and to make new recommendations or insist on previous ones. During the  last visit in 2018, the rapporteur made several recommendations, of which the one that stands out the most (because as of the time of writing it has not  been accomplished despite being necessary to do so) is the invitation to the Colombian government to sign the Escazú agreement (“Declaración de fin de visita – Colombia”, 2019), which is an important international agreement for the conservation and protection of the human rights of those living in rural areas of the countryside; particularly those plagued by violence.

As another example, the UNCaribe Think Tank compiled data presented in 2020 by the Observatory of Armed Conflict Dynamics in the Colombian Caribbean and presented such data in the categories of armed actions, and breaches of International Humanitarian Law (IHL), to recommend to the Colombian Government certain guidelines for the eradication of violence and the preservation of human rights in the Caribbean area. Among these recommendations is the highlighting of the work of human rights defense leaders: “The national and local governments should promote campaigns in different media highlighting the work of human rights defenders and the importance of their activity for communities and democracy.”. UNCaribe also promotes the involvement of different governmental actors to provide better solutions to the population: “Actively involve mayors and governors of municipalities and departments where this problem is critical in order to formulate public policies with a specific territorial approach, taking into account the real institutional capacities of these administrations.”, and to “Promote the signing of local humanitarian agreements or pacts between communities and illegal armed actors or the de facto powers that control these territories.” (Trejos Rosero & Badillo Sarmiento, 2020). This last recommendation underlines the uncomfortable truth that in certain sub-regions, illegal actors hold more authority than the state. 

Thanks to the data collected at the time of writing, and bearing in mind that over the years the Colombian government has repeatedly and intentionally ignored the recommendations that various entities such as the United Nations (UN) have made in their annual reports, we strongly invite the Colombian Government to consider the various recommendations made by national and international actors; to reinforce the efforts to establish state presence in the most affected territories in order to prevent illegal armed groups from continuing to gain territorial control of those areas; to ensure investigations of human rights violations in vulnerable Colombian territories, and finally, we extend an invitation to Colombian citizens as those principally affected by this grave situation  to raise awareness in different fields, whether it be social, political or via the media.

In this vein, it is possible to conclude that the current situation of systematic murders of union leaders is only one layer of the systematic violence against human rights defenders in Colombian territory. Likewise, it was possible to analyze the seriousness of this phenomenon, which endangers the lives of trade unionists and involves not just  collective statistics, but  painful individual cases.

Although measures have been  taken by the government to protect the lives of trade unionist, there is still a long way to go; therefore, it is relevant to listen to those directly affected, and follow the recommendations of the specialists on the subject, such as international and national actors.

Responding to and acknowledging the violence against human rights defenders, social leaders and trade unionists is not only a necessity but also a historical debt that needs to be paid.

*Article written by Alejandra Cabello De Ángel, Gary Suarez, Isabella Palacio & Tania Charris

References

Castaño, J. (n.d.). Panorama del sindicalismo en Colombia. http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/bueros/kolumbien/09150.pdf

Castle Associates Ltd. (2017, August 14). What does a trade union rep do? Understanding the role of a trade union representative. https://castleassociates.org.uk/blog/what-does-trade-union-rep-do-understanding-role-trade-union-representative 

Colombia Peace. Washington Office on Latin America. (2020). Important Numbers. https://colombiapeace.org/numbers/#:%7E:text=The%20Human%20Rights%20Ombudsman%E2%80%99s%20Office,and%20118%20cases%20in%202019 

Escuela Nacional Sindical. (2018). Informe de Especial: Violencia antisindical, impunidad y protección a sindicalistas en Colombia 2012 – 2017. Medellín, Colombia: Gobernación de Antioquia https://ail.ens.org.co/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2018/02/Violencia-antisindical-impunidad-y-protecci%C3%B3n-a-sindicalistas-en-Colombia-1.pdf

INDEPAZ. (2020). Radiografía de la violencia contra los líderes asesinados en Colombia – Indepaz http://www.indepaz.org.co/radiografia-de-la-violencia-contra-los-lideres-asesinados-en-colombia/ 

ITUC Survey of Violations of Trade Union Rights. (2019). Global Rights Index. https://survey.ituc-csi.org/Colombia.html?lang=en#tabs-3  

M. (2020). El país de los 3.240 sindicalistas asesinados. Agencia de Información Laboral – AIL. https://ail.ens.org.co/informe-especial/el-pais-de-los-3-240-sindicalistas-asesinados/ 

Ministerio de Defensa Colombiano. (n.d). Líderes sindicales. https://www.mindefensa.gov.co/irj/go/km/docs/Mindefensa/Documentos/descargas/Asuntos_Internacionales/Lideres%20sindicales.pdf

Murdered Trade Unionists: The Truth Behind Colombia’s Trade Agreement | AFL-CIO. (2019, May 16). AFL-CIO. https://aflcio.org/2019/5/16/murdered-trade-unionists-truth-behind-colombias-trade-agreement 

ONU DDHH. (2019, July 18). Declaración de fin de visita – Colombia. https://www.hchr.org.co/index.php/informes-y-documentos/visitas-relatores-especiales/446-visitas-relatores-especiales-a-colombia-2018/9070-declaracion-de-fin-de-visita-colombia

Soto, L., Ávila, A., Ortiz, A., & Pacheco-Girón, A. (2020, October 22). Estos son los líderes asesinados desde que Duque llegó al poder hasta marzo. La Silla Vacía. https://lasillavacia.com/estos-son-los-lideres-asesinados-desde-duque-llego-al-poder-hasta-marzo-78865  

Trejos Rosero, L., & Badillo Sarmiento, R. (2020). Los cuatro conflictos del Caribe Colombiano: Balance de la confrontación armada durante el primer semestre del 2020. https://www.uninorte.edu.co/documents/12067923/14752905/Los+cuatro+conflictos+del+Caribe+-+Informe+del+primer+semestre+(2020).pdf/6babd784-dec2-4b44-a1b5-d49b9c02de90#:~:text=Que%20en%20el%20Caribe%20colombiano,caracter%C4%B1sticas%20particulares%20y%20din%C3%A1micas%20aut%C3%B3nomas

Colombia and its debt with the protectors of nature.

Wilton Orrego, Angelica Ortiz & Gonzalo Cardona.

Throughout history, Colombia has experienced a longstanding issue in human rights matters, which remains present to this day. Because these problems are so prevalent in today’s society, individuals have risen  to expose the infringement of their rights. These individuals are social leaders and human rights defenders. Unfortunately, they are being killed and silenced due to the lack of political will by the State, with the worst affected being those in marginalized areas or communities of the country. According to the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, since 2016, over 400 human rights defenders have been killed in Colombia. The leaders killed belong to a wide spectrum of issues and backgrounds (indigenous, Afro-Colombian, rural, trade union workers, LGBTIQ activists etc), but this article will focus on environmental defenders. Environmental leaders may be  people from Indigenous, Afro-descendant, and campesino communities, or those hailing from an academic background in relation to the environment, biodiversity and the natural world in general. Environmental leaders are dedicated to preserving the well-being of the environment, monitoring pollution, contamination and destruction of natural areas. Generally speaking, the killings of social leaders and human rights defenders tend to occur in areas of high commercial or criminal interest, predominantly in the departments of Cauca, Arauca, Antioquia and Caqueta; however, it is not exclusively limited to these regions, as defenders are located all over the country. Environmental leaders tackle different topics and do different activities to raise awareness such as the protection of a certain animal species, monitoring of water pollution, or leading protests to attract the attention of the government about their harmful extractive activities, etc. According to INDEPAZ, in Colombia there have been 971 leaders murdered in Colombia since the signing of the peace accords in 2016, out of which 400 were human rights defenders (United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, 2021).  The number of environmental leader killings continues to rise each year, in 2016 there were 37 victims and by 2019 this number was 64 (Global Witness, 2020).

     The number of victims increases every year. For this reason, it is important to understand the patterns of violence and know which are the most affected regions within the country. More than 89% of the murders occurred under the modality of hired killers; the crime is committed by people who were transported on motorcycles and cars, then the procedure is to intercept the person and attack with a firearm. This usually occurs in the work space, residence or places frequented by the victims which implies that the perpetrators of the crime in most cases follow the victims, study them and plan the crime. (Somos defensores, 2020). The threats and murders of environmental leaders is an especially important subject  because these leaders raise awareness about different topics, but especially in many of the territories to have been impacted upon by over 50 year armed conflict, in addition to territories which have held appeal for drug trafficking and industries dependent on extraction of raw materials. The environmental leaders are protecting resource-rich areas from  legal and illegal exploitation, which exposes them to danger (Arvin, J. 2020). As a result they are perceived as a threat to the interests of many illegal groups like the Clan del Golfo (AGC), the ELN, and FARC dissidents among others, as well as  certain business sectors and the elite private interests  of some sectors of Colombian society such as the mining sector. According to the annual report Clockwork Orange from Somos Defensores, the majority of the cases reported throughout 2018  had been committed by different groups: 111  by unknown actors,  16  by neo-paramilitary structures, 12 by dissidents or post-demobilized groups of the FARC, 9 by the ELN and 7 by the public forces. These reports differ  from the State declarations implying that left-wing insurgents such as the ELN and FARC dissidents were chiefly responsible for the murders. More than  half of these cases take place in four specific regions of the country in which the rural areas are the most affected, specifically in departments such as Antioquia, Arauca, Cauca and Caqueta. However, it should be noted that these areas are the most violent for environmental defenders because the Colombian state has a very weak presence in certain areas of these departments (and many others throughout the country, leaving a huge vacuum of power, meaning these areas become the focus of territorial control where many  illegal groups compete to fill the vacuum). These are regions with a poor state presence and the presence of illegal actors who either target leaders because their work presents a challenge to their interests, or assume responsibility for carrying out assassinations on behalf of third parties who pay for this service.

     The statistics mentioned above provide an idea of the scale of violence facing social leaders and human rights defenders throughout the country. However, it is also necessary to look at individual cases in order to understand more and feel the loss of these leaders. One example of the threats faced by environmental leaders is the case of Gonzalo Cardona Molina, who worked for 23 years at the ProAves Foundation protecting the Yellow-eared Parrot from extinction until he was murdered in January 2021. According to ProAves, Gonzalo had been threatened by armed groups unable to understand his love for the endangered species and his lack of interest in economic gain or politics. His friends also reported that FARC dissidents warned the leader that he could not circulate through the ProAves Loros Andinos Reserve, in Roncesvalles, because it is an area under their jurisdiction. Another case of abherrant murder is Wilton Orrego León, a park ranger from  the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta National Natural Park. Wilton was shot dead in January 2019 , close to Tayrona National Park, in the Caribbean department of Magdalena. To demonstrate the risks faced by leaders, the area where Wilton was assassinated is part of a strategic corridor for the illegal arms and drugs markets and the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, because of its topography,  is a hiding place for criminal gangs and illegal armed groups such as the self-titled Autodefensas Conquistadores de la Sierra Nevada, an illegal organisation made up of former paramilitaries which was formerly known as the Pachencas. It seems a cruel irony that areas of immense environmental value are also areas with a strategic value for illicit interests. This means work in defense of the environment often leads to danger.

Despite the constant attacks and tragedies faced by environmental leaders, their work in defense of nature continues and leaders continue to emerge and work in defense of our natural wonders. One leader who refuses to give in is Angelica Ortiz, an indigenous leader and general secretary of the Fuerza de Mujeres Wayúu (Wayuu Women’s Force), an organization composed of female leaders from the Wayúu indigenous community in La Guajira. This organisation fights against extractive practices, such as the El Cerrejón coal mine, in northeastern Colombia. This mine is one of the largest open pit mines in the world, but its creation and development led to the displacement of several communities and damaging impacts at an environmental and social level. Her job as a defender of environmental rights has been invaluable for defending water as a fundamental right for the territory in the face of the expansion and coal exploitation in La Guajira, work that saw her nominated for the National Award for the Defense of Human Rights in Colombia in 2016, in the category of Defender of the Year. Therefore, the most important fact, even if their work in defense of nature is dangerous as it puts them against powerful state and private interests, is that they continue to  fight for the fundamental right of a healthy and balanced environment. Thus, these cases remind us that one aspect that still echoes in all citizens is undoubtedly that these people perform a vital and commendable work not only in the defense of our natural resources and species, but also for the balance of society; work that puts them at high risk given the weak state presence and proliferation of dangerous illegal groups in many regions of Colombia.

     However, the national government does not seem to be in agreement about the meaning of the job these people are carrying out, nor has it seemed particularly effective at introducing measures to guarantee their safety. According to El Tiempo, one of the current measures is that the Defense Ministry must collect the information, analyze the context, identify territories and make recommendations to the government and the President, who directly controls the information and decides on necessary actions for certain vulnerable sectors such as Cauca. Even though the government implemented some strategies, such as Prevention and Protection, these have not been completely effective in terms of applying measures to reduce threats and assassinations of leaders in the communities. That is because the government accepts as official figures homicides that have been verified by the United Nations or other organizations, but leaves out reports and context analysis of homicides and other attacks against social leaders and human rights defenders in Colombia which are not documented by the local authorities in regions where the crimes occurred. In addition, the picture becomes worse when seeing that organizations such as Amnesty International state that the violence has not decreased despite restrictions introduced due to the pandemic, in fact the targeting of leaders may have become easier seeing as most leaders have been restricted to their homes. With this in mind, they recommend that the government must take urgent and definitive measures to guarantee the safety of social leaders, and carry out a campaign of non-stigmatization regarding the work of social leaders. One other notable point to mention is the Escazú Agreement, which is a pact agreed upon by the countries of the Caribbean and Latin America. This regional agreement aims to make information related to environmental protection and dangers more transparent and available while offering better security guarantees for those working in defense of nature. However, at the time of writing, Colombia has not ratified the implementation of this important agreement. 

     Colombia has a long way to go to be able to guarantee the security of those who fight against injustice. Environmental defenders have been the first line of defence against the impacts and causes of climate breakdown as well as all the other challenges which the environment faces within Colombian territory. Over the years they are being challenged, and the damaging aspects of industries have also devastated forests, wetlands, oceans and the biodiversity within  these essential places. Yet, despite the clear evidence of the importance of their work for the well being and the increasing dangers and threats faced by environmental leaders, many companies, financiers and the governments fail to protect them and their vital peaceful labor (Somos defensores, 2020).  According to Human Rights Watch (2021) “Authorities should initiate a process to simplify and strengthen prevention and protection mechanisms under Colombian law. They should ensure civil society groups and international human rights and humanitarian agencies participate meaningfully in that process. The aim should be to coordinate existing mechanisms, overhauling, or abrogating those that are ineffective or have an unclear mandate.” Furthermore, other proposals suggested by INDEPAZ to protect social leaders include the strengthening of social organizations and self-protection mechanisms of communities such as: the indigenous, cimarron and peasant guards (unarmed protection guards who seek to defend communities in marginalized areas); second, regional pacts on non-violence and against stigmatization promoted by territorial councils of peace and other institutional spaces for participation and security guarantees; and finally, comprehensive compliance with peace agreements and participatory implementation of development plans with a territorial approach. Therefore, the recognition of their work and their investigations by civil society is the most important legacy that the assassinated leaders leave behind. Similarly, it is also necessary to have more regional pacts on non-violence and moves against stigmatization promoted by territorial councils of peace and other institutional spaces of participation and security. The Colombian government should delimitate protected areas over the country’s land, with a clear demarcation of strategic environmental areas and aim to limit agricultural expansion. Lastly, there should be a reorientation of the Colombian security forces , following what was included in the report Peace and Environmental Protection in Colombia: Proposals for Sustainable Rural Development: “the Office of the Attorney General and the police must effectively investigate crimes against social leaders and environmentalists, and the justice system must show an interest in solving these cases. The military’s new doctrine should include the fight against deforestation and other environmental preservation initiatives”.  Without a doubt efforts need to be made to guarantee that Colombians leave behind the problem of social indifference, becoming more interested about what is happening with the defenders of environmental rights in the country. Leaders like these give so much, sadly including their lives on occasion, to protect Colombia’s environment. They warrant our attention, respect and solidarity.

     It is clear that the current situation continues to worsen each day and according to Michel Forst, special rapporteur for human rights for the United Nations office in Colombia, “The murders of social leaders are political crimes”. Likewise, a report by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, denounced that the situation in this matter in the country is the worst since 2014 and that the State must fulfill its work of defense and protection of these leaders. Thus, the number of victims keep piling up under the blind eye of the government and most of society, causing us to miss out on great individuals. Additionally, it is necessary for society to be aware of the enormous value that these people demonstrate for the work they do, since it is not easy to find leaders who dedicate their lives to saving the fauna and flora of a region with so much passion and love; leaders such as Gonzalo Cardona and Wilton Orrego who have the right intention to help solve environmental problems that humanity has created for itself and despite the cries for help, the government does not respond appropriately enough for such a severe issue that must be addressed not only because it is their duty as a social state of law, but because it is a key point to fully comply with the peace process seeing as, according to INDEPAZ, 166 leaders were assassinated in 2020 in addition to the 36 ex-FARC-EP combatants who signed the peace agreement and laid down their weapons. However, it is here where we can find ways to help in our daily lives; raising awareness and making this information known to more people so that the struggles of these people are not simply taken for granted. The brighter the light we shine upon darkness, the less power it will have over us. 

*Article written by Mariery Arrieta, Camila Cepeda & Vanessa Jimenez.

References

Semana Journal (2021). Asesinan a Gonzalo Cardona guardián del Loro Orejiamarillo. Retrieved from https://sostenibilidad.semana.com/actualidad/articulo/asesinan-a-gonzalo-cardona-guardian-del-loro-orejiamarillo–colombia-hoy/58724

Rueda M. (28/01/2021). ONU Reconoce la labor de Francisco Vera. Semana Journal. Retrieved from https://sostenibilidad.semana.com/medio-ambiente/articulo/onu-reconoce-la-labor-de-francisco-vera-el-nino-ambientalista-colombiano/59007

France 24 journal (09/08/2020). El peligro de defender la Tierra. Retrieved from france24.com/es/medio-ambiente/20200809-medio-ambiente-defensores-asesinados-colombia

Presidential Council for Human Rights and International Affairs of the Government of Colombia (08/09/2016). Finalistas Premio Nacional Defensores de Derechos Humanos. Retrieved from http://www.derechoshumanos.gov.co/Prensa/2016/Paginas/finalistas-premio-nacional-defensores-ddhh.aspx

Helena Calle (2019, July 29). Colombia: el segundo país donde más asesinan líderes ambientales. ELESPECTADOR.COM. 

Global Witness. (n.d.). records the highest number of land and environmental activists murdered in one year – with the link to accelerating climate change of increasing concern. https://www.globalwitness.org/en/press-releases/global-witness-records-the-highest-number-of-land-and-environmental-activists-murdered-in-one-year-with-the-link-to-accelerating-climate-change-of-increasing-concern/

Arvin, J. (2020, 18 diciembre). Environmental defenders in Colombia are being killed in alarming numbers. Vox. https://www.vox.com/22174691/colombia-environment-defenders-killed

Morales, L. (2017). PEACE AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION IN COLOMBIA Proposals for Sustainable Rural Development. The Dialog Leadership for Americas. https://www.thedialogue.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Envt-Colombia-Eng_Web-Res_Final-for-web.pdf

Informe Global Witness ( 2020). Defending Tomorrow. https://www.globalwitness.org/en/campaigns/environmental-activists/defending-tomorrow/

Paz Cardona, A. (18 enero 2019). Colombia: asesinato de guardaparque en Santa Marta prende todas las alarmas. https://es.mongabay.com/2019/01/parques-nacionales-colombia-asesinato-guardaparques-santa-marta/ 

Pardo Karen (24 julio, 2018). En 2017 fueron asesinados 207 defensores del ambiente y el territorio. El Tiempo. https://www.eltiempo.com/vida/medio-ambiente/defensores-y-lideres-del-ambiente-asesinados-en-colombia-en-el-2017-246904

Noguera Montoya, S. (28 julio, 2020). Indepaz: en Colombia 971 líderes han sido asesinados desde la firma del Acuerdo de Paz. https://www.aa.com.tr/es/mundo/indepaz-en-colombia-971-l%C3%ADderes-han-sido-asesinados-desde-la-firma-del-acuerdo-de-paz/1924456

Calle Helena (29 julio, 2019). Colombia: el segundo país donde más asesinan líderes ambientales. El Espectador. https://www.elespectador.com/colombia2020/pais/colombia-el-segundo-pais-donde-mas-asesinan-lideres-ambientales-articulo-873431/

Duque’s tax reform was merely the tip of the iceberg: Those protesting want a more inclusive approach to politics.

Various sectors of Colombian society have been on strike since April 28th, facing excessive violence from public forces in response.

Colombians have been expressing their discontent with the policies and disposition of their government in a nationwide strike since April 28th.  The overwhelmingly peaceful protests, which have occurred in all major cities and roughly half of the municipal towns in the country, have been met with excessive force and violence by the police and military, and more worrying still, by unidentified civilian actors in several instances. Thus far, with protests still continuing, there have been more than 40 protestors and 1 police officer killed. In addition to these tragic deaths, there have also been multiple complaints of sexual violence, arbritrary detentions and physical assaults registered against members of the public forces. The catalyst for the national strike was a much criticised tax reform proposed by the government of president Ivan Duque and finance minister Alberto Carrasquillo. That proposal has been (temporarily) shelved with Carrasquillo offering his resignation, yet protests have continued and evolved into widespread rejection of the government, its policies and indeed its posture towards long marginalised sections of society. It is important to note that despite the initial call for a strike being announced by trade unions in response to the tax reform, Afro-Colombians, indigenous communities and the student population have become the face of this movement which is increasingly appearing as a clarion call for a more pluralistic vision of Colombia.

What has been most jarring about events has been the extent and excess of the response from security forces to the protests. There have been cases of businesses being vandalised and looted throughout the strike but authorities themselves have stated that the protests have been peaceful overall. So why have the military been called in? Why are live rounds seemingly being used? Why have there been Black Hawk helicopters hovering over residential areas dropping tear gas (at the very least) on Colombian citizens? Why are we seeing more and more attacks on protestors from armed civilians? The government position has been that all use of force has been in response to shots being fired or other violent acts by urban branches of left-wing guerrilla groups in cities such as Cali, which have seen the worst of the violence. Given the proximity of Cali to several war-torn regions in the south and south-west of the country, such a claim must be taken seriously, especially given the history of this type of infiltration in public protest groups by illegal groups such as the (now defunct) FARC and the (still active) ELN. However, if there are active guerrilla cells within the movement, why have they been so ineffective? One police officer murdered does not seem indicative of an active and ongoing urban conflict involving well trained and well armed guerrilla fighters. In contrast, the number of civilian deaths clearly warrants a closer inspection. Outspoken former president Alvaro Uribe sparked outrage and intrigue via a series of tweets in the early days of the strike which seemed to be openly justifying the use of lethal force on behalf of public forces to protect private businesses as well as referring the “Dissipated Molecular Revolution”, a theory emanating from extreme-right circles in Pinochet era Chile and mainly associated with a Neo-Nazi Chilean ideologue, Alexis Lopez. Curiously Lopez, whose perspectives are said to have influenced the brutal crackdown on anti-government protests in Chile in 2019, was invited to give a workshop at a military school in Bogotá back in February. In addition to calls for a crackdown on protests from the police and military, Uribe and other public figures also appeared to promote the establishment of armed community resistance to protestors, an incredibly provocative and dangerous call given the chilling history of paramilitary violence in Colombia. Such incendiary language cannot be excused, particularly given the carnage and horror experienced by protesters over the past week.

Another public figure who seemingly echoed Uribe’s calls for an armed civilian response to the overwhelmingly peaceful protest movement was Pereira mayor Carlos Maya. Maya has been subsequently criticized for his posture following a fatal shooting of peaceful protestors at an aqueduct in the city on Wednesday night which left one protestor dead, and another, Lucas Villa, fighting for his life having been shot several times by passengers in an unmarked car. Villa, a 37 year old protestor of seemingly boundless energy and positivity, had been filmed dancing in the street and shaking the hands of police forces at a march earlier in the day. He has since become a rallying symbol for the protest. Authorities, for their part, point to unacceptable damage to public and private property and attacks on members of the public force as justification for their methods. It must be pointed out however, that in addition to the claims of infiltration of marches on behalf of illegal groups, there are frequent claims that marches are infiltrated by the public forces themselves, intent on agitating as a means of justifying a heavy handed response. Such claims appear valid given instances that have happened: a truck carrying civilians firing on protestors was traced to the police force in Cali on Friday and other videos have been available suggesting agitation is indeed occurring. Such a situation raises serious question marks over the many alleged cases of peaceful protestors being attacked by “third parties” in Cali over the past number of days. On Sunday evening, reports emerged of armed attacks on members of the indigenous guard (an unarmed guard representing and protecting indigenous communities). Colombia’s only indigenous senator, Feliciano Valencia, reported that civilians, supported by members of the public forces had fired on indigenous guard members who were protecting a barricade blocking traffic. These attacks involving members of the public appear to be increasing over the course of the strike, and have likely been influenced by the incendiary language of notable public figures. The involvement of indigenous communities and their subsequent targeting (another of Uribe’s tweets caused uproar when it suggested a car carrying the Nasa indigenous flag belonged to the ELN guerrilla group. Vice-president Marta Lucia Ramirez has been criticised today for inferring that illegal money is supporting the indigenous protests) are sadly not a surprise keeping in mind the many infringements of indigenous rights and their continued stigmatization among certain sectors. Indigenous grievances are extremely pertinent to understanding much of the anger towards the government by not just indigenous communities but other sectors of society, and perhaps in particular, the student sector. Indeed, many of these issues represent a broad spectrum of the underlying factors regarding the existing unrest in Colombia. 

Understanding indigenous grievances goes a long way when it comes to understanding both the Colombian conflict and indeed the current unrest in the sense that the issue of land; who owns it and how it is used; is critical to both. There are almost 2 million indigenous people in Colombia, representing around 4.4% of the population. However, indigenous territory, according to the hugely progressive constitution of 1991, accounts for almost a third of the national territory. Generally speaking, this territory is situated far from the political and economic centre of the country, and in areas where there is and has been an absence of state institutions. Despite the assurances of indigenous autonomy in the constitution, and the ratification of subsequent safeguards such as the bill of indigenous rights, this autonomy is often overridden in pursuit of economic gain, and indigenous perspectives are seldom taken into serious consideration when development plans are drawn up. Indeed many of these plans involve extractive practices or large-scale agriculture which are contrary to indigenous beliefs and damaging for the environment. In addition to this, the absence of the state in these regions allows the presence of illegal armed groups who wish to profit from drug trafficking and illegal mining practices in indigenous territories. Worse still, these co-existing legal and illegal economic interests often appear to work in tandem; for example, the Wayuu indigenous community in the desert peninsula of La Guajira have suffered violence and displacement to allow for large-scale open pit coal mining, principally for the Swiss based multinational Cerrejon, on their lands. Communities there have long fought legal battles over the effects of these mining practices on the community and the environment. Representatives have been threatened and killed by illegal groups who operate in this territory in response. Many of the indigenous communities currently protesting in Cali (the Minga indigenous protests joined forces with the national strike) hail from the nearby department of Cauca, which has suffered disproportionate levels of violence throughout the armed conflict. The 2016 peace deal which led to the demobilisation of FARC fighters brought hope of a better, more inclusive future. However, the government of Juan Manuel Santos failed to establish an effective state presence in the areas vacated by the FARC, allowing a plethora of neo-paramilitary and dissident guerrilla groups to establish themselves in a strategic region rich in natural resources and fertile for illegal crops. Such a scenario was repeated in various regions and sub-regions throughout the country. The situation has only deteriorated during the mandate of current president Ivan Duque, whose political party made little secret of their plans to “tear the peace agreement to shreds”. By and large, they have been true to their word with constant attacks on the transitory peace tribunals established to shed light on, and bring justice for the victims of, the conflict. In addition there has been little support for many of the key pacts of the agreement such as regional development plans aimed at helping war-torn areas such as Cauca, or the voluntary crop substitution programs aimed at tackling the issue of illegal crops. In contrast, the current government has pursued controversial measures such as the aerial spraying of crops with pesticides that pose serious health and environmental hazards and also pushed for other controversial practices such as the introduction of fracking in the country. Such moves are vehemently opposed by indigenous communities as well as several other sectors of society. If these grievances were not sufficient cause for protest, indigenous leaders have been murdered with alarming regularity as part of a larger pattern of violence towards community leaders and human rights defenders in the country. Since 2016, there have been over 1,000 such leaders murdered throughout the country, with indigenous leaders representing around a quarter of this figure. Afro-Colombian communities in Cauca and elsewhere in the country (particularly in the department of Choco on the Pacific coast), as well as campesino rural communities, face similar challenges, threats and violence. These sectors have also been present in the marches. This grave situation highlights that these protests go well beyond the proposed tax reform. It is notable that these sectors by and large expressed strong support for the peace agreement in the controversial plebiscite of 2016. The urban centres that were by and large removed from the worst of the conflict narrowly rejected the agreement. The current protests therefore must be seen as a cry for attention and assistance in response to the critical human rights situation faced by many throughout the country. Many of those currently critical of the protests appear completely ambivalent to this daily reality within the safety of their urban and privileged bubbles. However, it appears that their children are not.

As previously mentioned, the national strike was initially called for by workers unions as a show of opposition to the proposed tax reforms, but it has increasingly evolved into a broader call for the plural political participation which was at the heart of the 2016 peace agreement. It is perhaps fitting that the student and young population of Colombia has played an increasingly active role in proceedings. This is a generation who grew up and came of age with the promise of peace in their country. Their parents and grandparents may have been more cynical given the history of violence and failed peace initiatives in Colombia, yet here was the tantalising prospect of the largest guerrilla force in the hemisphere laying down their arms and pledging to build a brighter future. This hope was dashed with the cynical manipulation of the agreement, led primarily by the party behind the current government and ex-president Alvaro Uribe, leading upto the 2016 plebiscite which saw a narrow rejection of the agreement. This generation of young people then saw the election of a government intent on destroying this peace agreement and the subsequent descent into violence for many of the war-torn regions which had committed to and dreamed of peace. It is a generation aware of the fact that part of this hostility to the agreement is based on a fear of uncomfortable truths, such as the fact that members of the armed forces murdered at least 6,402 of their own innocent citizens in order to present them as war bounties. It is a generation who have heard their government play linguistic games in attempts to downplay the situation in the country; massacres rebranded as collective killings, children recruited by illegal groups labelled as “war machines” and just last week, militarization of cities in response to democratic protests as “military assistance”. They have seen social leaders, human rights defenders, and disarmed ex-combatants murdered with impunity. It is, crucially, a generation with little belief in the discourse and reporting of this situation by a mainstream media incapable of asking the right questions; a generation who trust in the reporting of external sources such as the UN or NGOs such as Temblores or Amnesty International and these sources, in addition to an increasing platform for long marginalized sectors such as the indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities afforded by social media (as an aside, it is worrying and striking to note the targeting of social media and internet connection throughout these protests), hold a mirror up to Colombia and it is not a pretty sight. This is a generation of multi-lingual, educated and critical thinkers, but it is a generation who see better opportunities working outside of a country they love. President Duque has spoken of making Colombia the Silicon Valley of Latin America, yet all that is visible are the limited opportunities and pay that come with staffing call centres. However, this generation is digitally literate. This generation grew up as members of transnational digital communities (based on shared passions for One Direction, K-pop, football and video games among others) and this generation understands communication in the 21st century. They have seen their counterparts throughout the world play active roles in protest via digital activism and understand inherently how this works. Not everyone has been in the streets (parents and young people alike are wary of the very real dangers present) put they have been there (their much maligned screens in hand) in the digital sphere, resharing videos of brutality, amplifying the voices of those protesting and those on the margins, displaying their creativity and humour throughs memes, and most intriguing of all, bringing events in Colombia to the global community by calling on their digital communities to ally themselves with those protesting in Colombia, encouraging international communities to ensure that the government here feels pressure from outside, and calling out notable Colombian figures for their apparent indifference. There are shades of the increased digital activism by young people in relation to climate change. This generation is also aware that they face an uncertain unstable future due to increasing environmental damage and see a government actively pursuing practices which only serve to aggravate these environmental issues. And it is a generation which looks towards their indigenous and Afro-Colombian compatriots and sees communities whose attitude towards nature and how to live amongst it is more aligned to their own. Despite the horror of the past few weeks, it has been as heartening to see this generation give an example to us all as it has to see the solidarity shown by young people with other sectors of society. If this strike is to lead to true change, this activism and solidarity will need to continue and develop with an eye on next year’s presidential elections. Colombia is a country with traditionally low voter turnout, especially among young voters. Should that change, the impact on Colombian politics would be huge.

And so the protests continue, the violence continues and the competing narratives continue. President Duque has held negotiations with politicians from outside the government but has yet to call talks with the very people marching and dying in the streets. The international media continues to report on the various human rights infringements, while the national mainstream media continues to focus disproportionately on damage caused by protestors. In homes throughout the country, a generational battle of wills is being waged between a younger generation who believe in a more inclusive future and their elders scarred by memories of war and suspicious of long marginalised sectors. Being Colombia, there has been art, music and dance but there has also been tears, shock and frustration. Those who only look to the tax reform fail to understand the collective anger felt towards the current government and its policies. For the past few years the slogan “They are killing us” has been used by indigenous, Afro-Colombian and rural communities to refer to the ongoing campaign of violence they face. For the past few weeks, it has become a rallying cry for those being met with terror and brutality in the principal towns and cities of Colombia for the mere act of pursuing their constitutional right. Some of the most important universities in the countries have shared their proposals for how the country should proceed. The proposals refer to an economically and socially inclusive pact for financial development, the right and access to healthcare, a strengthening of the democratic policies established in the 1991 constitution, a thorough implementation of the 2016 peace accords, an adherence to a state of law which respects the right to protest, and the right to access quality education.. With so many examples of excessive use of force over the past 12 days, increased calls for reform of the military and police can also be expected. From what has been written above and what has been proposed from the academic community, it is clear that what is at the heart of this current situation is not simply rejection of the tax reforms, but the battle for a more pluralised, inclusive and socially conscious approach to politics. Given the track record of President Duque and his government for acknowledging errors, accepting criticism and engaging in true dialogue, it seems unlikely any real progress can be made during his mandate. However, the emergence of an increasingly active and engaged citizenry of students and young people offers a tantalizing potential for electoral change next year.

Indigenous leaders: Daily threats and killing in their struggle to defend community and territory in Colombia.

“S.O.S They are killing us”; Indigenous protestors from the Nasa community in the south and south-west of Colombia.

Colombia is an extraordinary, beautiful and diverse nation, but one with serious challenges such as a history of conflict, social inequality, and a lack of inclusion. These challenges mean that work in defense of human rights is hugely necessary. That is why the job of human rights defenders and social leaders is important, but also one of the deadliest and most dangerous. A social leader is someone who “defends the collective rights and develops action for the welfare recognized within its community, organization or territory. So, every social leader is considered a Human Rights defender” (Indepaz, 2020). It is specifically this definition that allows us to understand that the profile of these leaders differs in terms of their focus. Some of them work to preserve their ancestral communities’ rights, some in environmental protection, others on complex issues such as land restitution, and so on. Colombia has specific situations that can help one to understand better and recognize why it is important to talk about this issue. For instance, one of the main objectives of the Peace Accords of 2016 between the Colombian government and the FARC guerrillas is to guarantee the creation of new political parties and movements that will facilitate political participation for the territories that have been on the margins of society and victim to violence. Such   participation of communities and parties that have been directly and indirectly affected by the conflict is a necessary step in political processes and territorial and regional decision making. Sadly, reality shows us that social leaders are being targeted as part of a current wave of increased violence against human rights defenders since the agreement, especially in communities traditionally marginalized such as indigenous, Afro-Colombian , and rural communities. 

     Among the leader profiles most hit by the violence, it is imperative to  mention the indigenous leaders. An indigenous leader is any member of indigenous groups in the country that represents their own communities and works to defend their culture and fulfill the needs the State has not.  According to OHCHR’s numbers, 69 Indigenous leaders have been killed since 2016, making up approximately 16 percent of the 421 human rights defenders who have been murdered in that period. To elaborate, as of  2019, the number of indigenous Colombians killed had risen steeply amid a resurgence of violence by dissident rebel groups and paramilitaries (BBC, 2019). The department where most of these crimes have happened is Cauca but the crimes have been committed all across the country. This article will be focused on indigenous social leaders with a particular focus on the Caribbean region. The aim is to explore the difficulties, threats, and violence they face for defending their rights and highlight why it is important to raise awareness about this issue through examples of social leaders, statistics and data from different sources that will allow one to see the seriousness of the issue.

     During the history of Colombia, violence has been  a phenomenon that has affected every Colombian directly or indirectly. At the national level departments such as Cauca, Antioquia and Choco have been particularly affected, while in the Caribbean region, departments such as Bolivar, Cordoba, Sucre, and Magdalena have suffered, and continue to do so, due to the presence of illegal groups in the region. This region has been filled with human rights violations as a result of the conflicts between different actors. The conflict over land has been a battle for years in rural areas, where the main issue is that spaces do not have owners due to a lack of official ownership documents, a factor that has increased the tension between armed groups and indigenous communities (OHCHR, 2016). Another problem that these areas have is a conflict of interests behind the zone’s operation. On the one hand, indigenous communities need to produce their food and basic necessities. On the other, the lack of presence and control of the State allows illegal armed groups to take advantage of the geography of the land, by using it to connect with other regions to transport and grow coca among other illicit operations. This tension has become visible in these regions. Paramilitary groups have left pamphlets in areas to threaten the community and impart their policy of terror, while violence and the killing of indigenous leaders have increased.  

    According to INDEPAZ more than 166 social leaders had been murdered throughout 2020 as of July of that year. Such figures are simply shocking. If this situation can be seen as one negative consequence of the 2016 agreement, then what of the positive ones? At this point, it is important to analyze the results of the Peace agreement, because one aim of the agreement was to offer greater inclusion to indigenous, Afro-Colombian, and other rural communities who had suffered disproportionately during the long civil conflict.  However, the outcomes are not the ones that were promised or expected. Ana Manuela Ochoa, a Transitional Justice (Jurisdicción Especial para la Paz /JEP) magistrate, and Kankuamo indigenous community member spoke at a gathering of regional ethnic representatives in 2019, and said that the most important measures that any transitional justice must aim for is “to pull out of the root what caused the conflict, such as discrimination, inequalities, the denial of human dignity and the despise or indifference to life”. When it comes to indigenous people’s guarantees of no repetition, she affirmed that they are related with “living with dignity, fullness, balance, and harmony according to their identity, cosmovision, beliefs, culture, own rights, language and the respect of their territory”. However, the statistics and stories regarding violence towards indigenous leaders paint a bleak picture of the reality faced by indigenous groups in their efforts to protect their communities and their territories.

    The human impact of the deaths in Colombia is discouraging. We are able to identify cases of human rights violations every day, with murder being a near-daily occurrence.  One example of this slaughter is the case of the former governor of Resguardo Indigena de Guadualito (North of Santander); Emiliano Trochéz. Emiliano was a teacher and an indigenous leader, who fought for the interests of his community. Emiliano was murdered on August 10th, 2018. He had received threats, which he reported to the authorities, but still, there have been no perpetrators brought to justice. Another recent case took place in San Marcos, Sucre, where the Zenú indigenous community lives, and occasionally, dies with total impunity. Last year (2020), on November 8th, a massacre occurred that took the life of 5 members of the community; Arquímedes Centenaro, Luis Cochero Alba, Darwin de Hoyos Beltrán, Oscar Javier Hoyos Banquet, and Julio Hoyos Moreno (Guarnizo, 2020). The first three were specific targets of the attack while the latter two just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Thankfully, there was a survivor:  the indigenous captain of the Cabildo Arawak of the Zenú ethnicity, Carlos Arturo Valerio Betún, who had also been a target but was not present in the zone at the time. Both crimes remain in impunity.

    The massacre in Sucre was a product of the land conflict and the power vacuum left by the government. The  area has been inhabited ancestrally by the Zenú community dating back to pre-colonial times. Violence throughout the 90s and in the early part of the following decade had led to many people abandoning their land for fear of violence. However, large cattle owners in the area had claimed it as theirs, even though they have been accused of contaminating natural resources surrounding the territory and forcing the displacement of local communities so they can continue expanding their livestock farming. As a result, more than 30 families have left their homes because of fear, and the ones who stood up for themselves have paid a terrible price. The leader who survived the attack, Carlos Valerio, said that right after he found out about the massacre, someone had called him and told him that he would be  next. He went to the police station asking for help but was not offered any solution. The worst part is that this was not the first time his life had been threatened. He has received many threats for demanding respect towards his community, filing legal papers, and reporting officials and individuals related to irregular displacement, but none of these were acted upon. The indifference of the State is seemingly the only thing that remains intact in the region. 

   Analyzing the factors behind the violence, it is impossible not to notice that the most affected zones regarding the killing of social leaders are the same zones with a high presence of illicit crops, strategic routes, militarized territory, legal and illegal extractive activities, and a major number of warnings provided by the Early Warning System (Sistema de Alertas Tempranas), a system provided by the Ombudsman’s Office (Defensor del Pueblo), which is used for alerts whenever there is a situation of risk. Indigenous leaders have stated that they have tried to communicate with the government looking for protection because latifundistas (large-scale absentee landowners), in their desire to expand, have taken indiscriminate possession of indigenous lands. This highlights the fact that people have asked for help on many occasions but they have not gotten any response. Moreover, these territories are nearby Zonas Transitorias de Normalización (Transitory zones of normalization) and Espacios Territoriales de Capacitación y Reincorporación (Territory spaces of capacitation and reincorporation), where former FARC -EP members having handed over their  weapons prepare for a  return to civil life (CINEP, 2018). Like the indigenous communities in the region, these ex-combatants too are in a position of vulnerability and must live with the fear of being targeted.

     In conclusion, it seems clear that Colombia, a country globally known for its diversity and recognition of its indigenous population in its Constitution, lives in a constant discrepancy between what is on paper and what is the reality. The state claims the protection and respect of the indigenous communities as one of their biggest accomplishments; it celebrates their diversity and speaks globally about their rights and culture. However, that is far from a true reflection of reality, where there is no respect towards their land neither from the government nor in many cases, the civilian population, and certainly none from the numerous illegal groups who hold sway in regions throughout the country. There is no response to the community’s needs and there is little acknowledgment of their daily struggles. Indigenous communities suffer from marginalization and displacement every day and the leaders that stand up risk their lives just to die surrounded by impunity and abandonment. We wonder when indigenous voices will be listened to. We encourage Colombian society to take an active role in the promotion of indigenous rights, as we cannot forget that this land was, is, and will always be theirs, as well as ours.

*Article written by Gabriela Diaz, Joseph Lopez, & Emily Rodriguez

References

BBC. (2019, 10 30). Colombia violence: Dissident rebels kill indigenous leader. BBC.

CINEP. (2018). ¿Cuáles son los patrones? Asesinatos de Líderes Sociales en el Post Acuerdo. Retrieved from https://www.cinep.org.co/publicaciones/es/producto/cuales-son-los-patrones-asesinatos-de-lideres-sociales-en-el-post-acuerdo/

Commission, T. (2019, 07 26). Autoridades indígenas de la costa Caribe marcharon por los líderes sociales. doi:https://comisiondelaverdad.co/actualidad/noticias/autoridades-indigenas-de-la-costa-caribe-marcharon-por-los-lideres-sociales

Guarnizo, J. (2020, 10 8). La masacre de 5 indigenas y campesinos de la que algunos no quieren que se hable en Sucre. Vorágine. Retrieved from https://voragine.co/la-masacre-de-cinco-indigenas-y-campesinos-de-la-que-algunos-no-quieren-que-se-hable-en-sucre/

Indepaz. (2020, 07 15). Special inform; Register of leaders and human rights defenders killed since the peace agreement. Retrieved from http://www.indepaz.org.co/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Informe-Especial-Asesinato-lideres-sociales-Nov2016-Jul2020-Indepaz.pdf

OHCHR. (2016). Problemas y realidades del campo en el Caribe colombiano. Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. Retrieved from https://www.hchr.org.co/index.php/compilacion-de-noticias/56-desc/8139-problemas-y-realidades-del-campo-en-el-caribe-colombiano

Female leaders in Colombia: We need to celebrate & support their work rather than merely pay homage when it is too late.

Edenis Barrera, Francia Marquez, Carlota Salinas & Soraya Bayuelo

Human Rights are universal and inherent to all individuals, and they must be guaranteed and protected. Nonetheless, there have been and there continues to be many human rights infringements throughout the world. These infringements need to be reported and in Colombia, social leaders and human rights defenders are responsible for this work, among other tasks. Therefore, there is an emergence of leaders who are willing to stick up for their communities’ rights. According to the Center for Social Leadership (2013) “Social leadership means to devote one’s life and talents to improving society regardless of social standing, wealth, or privilege. Social leaders serve and bless others”. Furthermore, it is possible to categorize them according to the field in which their work focuses on (Corredor, 2018). For example, there are indigenous and Afro-Colombian leaders, defenders of the environment, union leaders, women’s rights activists, and LGBTIQ+ leaders, among other areas of activism (Corredor, 2018). Unfortunately, these human rights defenders are confronted by  several challenges. In some places, these leaders face resistance from the very authorities who should be ensuring rights are met: : “Governments detain human rights defenders, prevent them from raising funds, restrict their movements, place them under surveillance and, in some cases, authorize their torture and murder”. This tends to happen when the activism of the leader is somehow identified as an obstacle to certain interests. Moreover, “many companies either stand by as Governments employ tough law and order responses against defenders, or they aggressively target defenders who challenge their activities through legal or other means” (OHCHR, 2020, p.1). In Colombia, social leaders and human rights defenders are facing several risks, and their lives are being intensely threatened. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (2019) argues that these leaders perform a pivotal role within their communities because they act as mediators between the state and the people who want their voices to be heard and their necessities to be met. This article will focus on the activism developed by female leaders. In this case, a female leader seeks to eradicate stigmas and stereotypes related to gender roles and inequalities through social activism. Moreover, they could be also considered as feminist activists who “fight against a system that favors only men, that designs structures to achieve equal opportunities and that promotes values ​​such as autonomy and self-determination inside and outside her organization” (Sainz, 2017). Consequently, it is pivotal to empower these women for them to carry on fighting for the protection of their communities’ rights. While these women should be celebrated for the key role they assume in society, the danger surrounding any form of advocacy throughout many marginalized regions of Colombia means that what they need most urgently is protection.

Firstly, female leaders are being murdered in Colombia, and the national situation must be urgently addressed. Since 2016, around 131 female leaders have been assassinated (Noguera, 2020). According to El Espectador:  “During the first half of 2019, ten of the 59 homicides that were committed against social leaders corresponded to women. In this same period, 171 of them suffered some type of aggression, such as threats and attacks.” One example of this wave of violence is the case of Edenis Barrera Benavides.  According to La Paz en el Terreno (2018) , “she was last seen alive” on March 18th 2017 when attended first aid and social work training with the Civil Defense. The following day, she was found half naked and sexually assaulted (Fiscalia General de la Nacion) by some cyclists in San José de Bubuy (La Paz en el Terreno, 2018). This comes to show how even though the crime was classified as an aggravated femicide by “the First Criminal Circuit Court” (La Paz en el Terreno, 2018), the pattern repeats itself in terms of silencing leaders. It makes it easier for their killers to know their location, since they are public figures, so many people can easily track them down. Simply carrying out their work makes them an easy target in regions where there is little order apart from that administered by groups outside the margins of the law. 

However,  this certainly has not stopped strong and outraged female activists from carrying out this necessary task. One such leader is Francia Márquez, who has gained international recognition as the Goldman Environmental Prize winner in 2018 (Palomino, 2021) and as one of the BBC’S 100 most influential women in the world in 2019 (BBC, 2019). Currently, she is planning a campaign for the presidency of Colombia (Semana, 2020). In addition, her job focuses on working  alongside communities (mostly black and indigenous) and standing up to multinationals, illegal groups and those who threaten the environment and the communities which live in peripheral parts of the country. Marquez sees women as being crucial in bringing about necessary change at a community and an environmental level, and has spoken about the need to dismantle patriarchal structures in order to defend nature (France24, 2019). In 2014, she led a march of women from their home in Cauca to Bogotá to demand state action against illegal mining practices in their region. Given the precarious situation faced by social leaders and female activists in the country, it should come as no surprise that she has been threatened and even attacked for her work. But rather than being scared, she is angry, and has stated: “We are facing a criminal state, which by omission or intent, is permitting an ethnic, physical and cultural genocide of black, indigenous and rural communities…”(La Libertad Sublime, 2019). Even though her work focus is on Colombian territories, Francia has also forged links with activists throughout the rest of the world, showing how important it is to correlate the local ecosystems, environment and cultures to raise awareness of how the issues these communities and their women face are a matter of international interest. Therefore, it is necessary to start building a global agenda from the home lands and this can be done by telling and analyzing  the stories of those who dare to challenge the imposed order.  Consequently, women who dare to stand up and fight for their communities such as Edenis  or Francia  challenge the male chauvinism so deeply ingrained  in Colombian society. They become targets not only because of their leadership, but also because, with their activism, they are deconstructing the idea that only men can be leaders, and the only ones willing to fight and get angry. Leaders such as these also challenge the notion that certain  sectors be  excluded from the decision making process. They are a demonstration of what active participation in a democracy should look like. They can and they are making their voices heard too. This also highlights the need for this type of leader, so people stop reproducing these gender barriers, and the country can make progress on the path to becoming a more egalitarian society.

While the stories of leaders such as Edenis and Francia provide insight into the challenges faced by female leaders at the national level, in the Caribbean region, female activists are also encountering multiple challenges. Therefore, the growing statistics of murders and femicides must be a principal concern in this area.  According to Pares (2018), since the signing of the Peace Agreement until 2018, 20% of the killings have been perpetrated against female leaders. In this case, at least 3 belonged to the Caribbean region. Moreover, El Espectador affirms that in the first half of 2019, there were around 10 crimes against female leaders. In addition, several women received threats, mainly in the departments of Cordoba, La Guajira and Bolivar. One of the cases that truly represents the reality that female leaders have to go through, is that of Carlota Salinas. Carlota was a leader, a women’s rights defender and a mother of three, who directed her life towards working for the good of her community based in the department of Bolivar. Carlota was affiliated with the national women’s rights organisation Organización Feminina Popular. On the day of her death, Carlota had been volunteering to ensure there were necessary resources for the most vulnerable sections of her community as the country entered a nationwide lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic (La Libertad Sublime, 2020). Unfortunately, she was  killed on March 25th 2020 in front of her own house. This is just one example of several unacceptable  episodes, in which women are killed with no mercy. More must be done to bring justice to their families and better protection and safeguards must be established to protect leaders involved in such vital and worthy tasks.  Despite the threats and the danger, there are other regional leaders who carry on defending their communities’ rights and promoting peace. A great example is Soraya Bayuelo, a journalist, cultural manager, writer, and researcher (La silla vacia, n.d.) In addition, Soraya is the founder and director of the Colectivo de Comunicaciones Montes de María Línea 21, an NGO which aims to develop alternative spaces to make possible the construction of citizenship, participation and identity (Montemariaaudiovisual, 2010). Montes de Maria is an agriculturally rich subregion in the departments of Bolivar and Sucre (Centro de Memoria Histórica, 2017), and a region which suffered greatly due to paramilitary violence during the worst years of the armed conflict. The region has since developed several worthy projects in relation to peacebuilding, community empowerment and construction of historical memory, with women in the community being central to it all. Soraya lives in the region, in the town of Carmen de Bolívar, and as such, she has a proper understanding of the issues that the region faces.  Furthermore,  she has been working for the establishment of peace, the preservation of memory and the celebration of people’s lives (DW, 2020). These examples are essential to raise awareness of the seriousness of this issue. Thus, it is pivotal to recognize the threats faced by female leaders and what strategies must be implemented to improve their situations. 

While statistically male leaders are more likely to be killed, women face additional risks due to sexism and chauvinistic attitudes in society, so it is necessary to design and implement strategies to address this issue. Indepaz affirms that since the signing of the Peace Agreement with FARC in 2016 until august 2020, around 1,000 social leaders have been assassinated. These statistics show that 86,8% of the killings were committed against men (Gonzalez, 2020). Nonetheless, there is a great concern in the case of female leaders due to the component of sexual violence. According to the Human Rights Council of the UN (2019), they not only face the challenges that social leadership brings, but also the risk of “femicide, rape, acid attacks, arbitrary arrest, detention, killings and enforced disappearances” (p. 9). Thus, this is an expression of the exclusion and degradation of women’s lives due to gendered social constructions and patriarchal values. Moreover, other perils confronted by women activists are the invisibilization of their work, their exclusion from the process of decision-making, public shaming and attacks on their reputation, threats to their families and intromission into their private sphere (UN Human Rights Council, 2019). One tragic example is represented by Nataly Salas, who was a 19 years-old student activist. She was raped and killed, and the man responsible has so far gotten away with this crime (Pares, 2018) . This is a concerning issue because it is indicative of  an internalized misogyny within Colombian society that must be eradicated. Therefore, it is necessary to effectively develop and implement a legal framework as well as policies in order to protect their rights and integrity. For example, the United Nations demands more state presence in these marginalized areas as well as the promotion of strategies to dismantle criminal groups (La Republica, 2021). Furthermore, the High Counselor for Human Rights of the Presidency, Nancy Gutierrez, affirms that in order to avoid more assassinations, it is necessary to understand the causes of violence and recognize the necessities of these communities (La Republica, 2021). In the case of women, it is essential to promote leadership and increase their participation in order to create a safer and more equal society for them. According to the OHCHR (2019) both the State and the International community have the responsibility of protecting them while respecting the principles of “confidentiality, (obligation to) do no harm, and the informed consent of a person”. Consequently, the protection of female leaders must be a collective responsibility and a joint effort involving state entities, NGOs and civil society.

To conclude, social leaders and human rights defenders are crucial actors within our communities. However, they are facing a tough and challenging  situation as they are being threatened and in far too many cases,  killed. In Colombia, the numbers demonstrate that the situation continues  and, unfortunately, is worsening. In this case, female leaders are also being threatened and killed within  this phenomenon. Female activists do not only face the dangers of being a leader, but also those related to violence based on their gender. It is pivotal to understand that female leaders are necessary in society because they truly comprehend women’s struggles and are agents of change in society. They are able to make impactful changes while working from their communities and improving people’s living conditions. However, they are not receiving enough recognition for their work. For example, Soraya and Francia are empowered women that must be recognized and embraced for their commitment with their communities. Despite facing multiple threats, they carry on managing their projects with passion and devotion. Consequently, it is vital to celebrate and support their activism and leadership, and that of all leaders standing up for women’s rights and in defense of their communities. Colombian communities do not want more martyrs, but strong female leaders able to ensure  justice and peace. As a result, it is recommended that authorities support female leadership in all fields, especially in power positions in order to eradicate gender stereotypes. Moreover, by promoting gender equality and addressing the issue of sexual violence, female leaders’ situation could improve greatly.

*Article written by Natalia Berrick, Valentina Montes & Maria Riedel

REFERENCES

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