Some 380,000 Colombians were forced from their homes last year by the continuing armed conflict, a local human rights group has said. The Centre for Human Rights and the Displaced, Codhes, says this is a 25% rise on 2008 and brings the total displaced since 1985 to 4.6 million. Government officials say the number registered as displaced has risen. But they say the Codhes total includes figures from previous years and those falsely claiming compensation. In its annual report, Codhes says 2008 saw the rate of displacement rising to levels last seen in 2002, the worst year on record when 410,000 people were forced to flee.
According to its study, 380,863 people had to leave their homes or places of work as a result of the armed conflict between guerrillas, paramilitary groups and the security forces. Codhes says that between 1985 and 2008, 4.6 million Colombians have been uprooted. "The great majority live in severe conditions of poverty," the Codhes report said, while their own land and property had fallen into the hands of others in a "de facto expropriation".
According to government figures, 2.9 million people were displaced between 1997 and 2008. The government department dedicated to helping such people, Accion Social, said the number seeking to be registered as displaced and therefore qualifying for aid had risen, but often these were for events dating back to the 1980s, 1970s and even 1961. Accion Social said around a third of the people included in the Codhes figure had in fact been displaced in 2007.
Fraudsters, officials said, had also mounted schemes to register thousands of people as displaced thereby "robbing those really displaced by violence in Colombia of the chance to get help". Whatever the actual figures, it is clear that two Colombias are developing under President Alvaro Uribe. Towns and cities, where the majority of Colombians live, have become safer under his administration, with murders and kidnappings down. But in rural areas, where most of the displacement takes place, the situation is as bad, or perhaps worse, than ever...
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Israel of Latin America ?
President Chavez freezes ties with Colombia, withdrawing its ambassador from Bogotá and halting trade deals. Venezuela, he said, would also substitute imports from Colombia - which currently account for about a third of the country's trade - with goods from other countries, notably Brazil and Ecuador. The announcement came a day after the Colombia government said weapons bought by Venezuela from Sweden in the 1980s had ended up with Colombian guerrillas. The Colombian government said its troops had recovered Swedish anti-tank weapons in a raid on a camp run by the Farc. Mr Chavez, denying that Venezuela armed "any guerrilla group or armed group", accused Mr Uribe of behaving irresponsibly with his "unfounded" accusations.
But there is something else -
The dispute between the two neighbours comes as Colombia prepares to allow the US to use four of its military bases, a move which has angered Venezuela. Colombia says the accord will give the US military access to air bases to gather intelligence and support operations against drugs production and terrorism. But Mr Chavez says it is part of an effort by Washington to turn Colombia into the "Israel of Latin America".
....cirque du soleil?
But there is something else -
The dispute between the two neighbours comes as Colombia prepares to allow the US to use four of its military bases, a move which has angered Venezuela. Colombia says the accord will give the US military access to air bases to gather intelligence and support operations against drugs production and terrorism. But Mr Chavez says it is part of an effort by Washington to turn Colombia into the "Israel of Latin America".
....cirque du soleil?
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