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March 25, 2002
Caught in a Colombian Crossfire
by Garry Leech
Many Colombians were concerned that President Andrés Pastrana's
recent suspension of peace talks between the government and the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) would dramatically
escalate the civil conflict. Their fears appeared to be well founded
when the Colombian military initiated a massive bombing campaign
against the former zona de despeje before sending in thousands
of ground troops to retake the zone's principal towns. The FARC
retaliated by launching an extensive bombing campaign against urban
targets and the country's infrastructure. But for indigenous groups
in the southwestern department of Cauca, the violence began escalating
long before the collapse of the peace process. In recent years,
both paramilitary and guerrilla forces have increasingly violated
the neutrality of indigenous resguardos.
These
violent incursions into indigenous territories have resulted in
the deaths of community leaders, the corruption of indigenous culture
and the recruitment of their youths into the armed groups. According
to Fabio Calambas, vice-governor of the Guambiano indigenous communities
located near the Andean highland town of Silvia, "The end of
negotiations has made no difference to us. We have suffered invasions
by the armed groups throughout the peace process."
The Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca (CRIC), which is comprised
of leaders from many indigenous groups in Cauca including the Guambianos,
Paez and Yanacona, has responded to these invasions by repeatedly
issuing statements declaring the neutrality of the region's indigenous
communities with regards to the armed conflict. But both the paramilitary
forces of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) and the
FARC have refused to recognize these declarations of neutrality.
This fact was clearly evidenced on March 4 when a paramilitary death
squad in the small town of Santander de Quilichao killed Samuel
Fernandez Dizu, the former governor of the Las Delicias indigenous
resguardo.
The murder of Fernandez Dizu occurred one day before a national
forum organized by the CRIC was to be held in the city of Popayan
to address the social, economic and cultural emergency faced by
indigenous communities. At the forum, leaders vowed to continue
their campaign of civil resistance against armed intruders by continuing
to assemble entire communities to peacefully confront them.
The CRIC's director, Anatolio Quirá, criticized the media
for aggravating the situation by publishing reports that indigenous
communities armed with sticks have confronted the armed groups.
Addressing the media's misrepresentations of the non-violent tactics
used by indigenous communities, Quirá stated, "These
sticks--bastones de mando--are always with us. They are not
weapons. They are a part of the relationship between us and nature."
Erroneous
reports of stick-wielding Indians confronting one of the armed groups
could prove deadly for members of indigenous communities often accused
of harboring sympathies for one side or another. According to a
Paez leader, Onesimo Carpces, "We have problems with all the
armed groups because when the guerrillas come they say we are army
collaborators and when the army comes they say we are guerrilla
collaborators. For this reason we are not really free."
Carpces, alcalde for the 6,500 Paez who live in Pitayo, admits
that the problem of unemployment in the indigenous communities has
resulted in some of their youths joining the armed groups or enlisting
in the military. He claims the armed groups actively recruit indigenous
youths disenchanted with a traditional way of life that has left
them impoverished and with little hope for economic improvement.
The CRIC is attempting to combat this problem by encouraging indigenous
youths to participate in regional conferences in order to develop
a closer identification with their elders and traditional culture.
But it is proving to be an uphill battle in a country in which 80
percent of the indigenous population lives in conditions of extreme
poverty.
Because of the lack of commerce available for traditional food
crops, which are difficult to transport to distant markets, many
indigenous communities now supplement the meager subsistence provided
by maize, plantains, yucca, coffee, beans, potatoes, wheat and onions
with coca or poppy cultivation. As a result, says a young Yanacona
leader, William Armando Palechor, "Indigenous communities have
adopted illicit crops as traditional crops. In the high zones they
grow poppies and in the hot zones they cultivate coca."
The cultivation of illicit crops on indigenous lands has aggravated
problems with the armed groups--paramilitaries in the lower elevations
and the FARC in the Andean highlands--whose incursions onto resguardos
have increased as they seek to expand their territorial control
over the drug trade. According to Palechor, the FARC does not insist
that the Yanaconas grow coca or poppies, "but they force communities
to pay a tax for cultivating and commercializing illicit crops.
Also, the problem is worse now because the AUC is present and there
have been deaths. They say they have come to socially cleanse."
The Guambianos have also experienced increasing incursions onto
their resguardo by the armed groups--particularly the FARC's
8th Front--because of poppy cultivation. According to Fabio Calambas,
"We have problems with the armed groups who invade and conduct
activities in our territories without authority. They occupy our
territories with violence and then when the public forces arrive
we are caught in the middle of the fighting."
Some
of the 16,000 Gambianos living in the region cultivate the beautiful
red, violet and white poppies on small plots of land behind their
mud-brick houses. They also grow high altitude food crops on fields
spread across the steep mountainsides. While poppies only constitute
a small percentage of the land under cultivation, they provide a
far more reliable income for poor indigenous families than traditional
crops. Legal food crops are mostly used for subsistence because
of their low market value and the difficulty of transporting them
from remote mountain communities to towns and cities. While traffickers
from Cali willingly travel to the resguardo to purchase the
valuable opium latex from Guambiano poppy growers.
But the individualistic nature of the drug trade has corrupted
the economic culture of Guambiano communities. According to Calambas,
"Our economy is not an exploitation economy, or an economy
of profit. It is a subsistence economy in which we produce the minimum
quantity required for consumption. It is our tradition. It is not
capitalism, it is communitarian."
In an attempt to deter individual Guambiano families from cultivating
poppies and to encourage them to return to a more communal system
of agriculture, the Guambiano cabildo has been developing
crop substitution agreements with the government. One alternative
project in which the Guambianos manually eradicated poppies and
began breeding fish in large outdoor tanks was devastated by Plan
Colombia's aerial fumigation of illicit crops. Calambas claims,
"We have suffered fumigations that contaminated the water and
destroyed the trout crop. The few that survived were never bought.
These fumigations have affected our crops and our lifestyle."
In order to effectively eliminate poppy cultivation, the Guambianos
need more arable land and a means of getting legal food crops to
markets. Because of the rugged terrain 9,000 feet up in the Andes,
there is a limited amount of arable land and much of the farming
is conducted on the sides of steep mountains. According to Calambas,
"The survival of the Guambianos depends on land. We want to
negotiate with the government to legally obtain more land for the
community. But when the land is in our hands, there must be another
project to finance the traditional crops."
Attempts to improve their economic condition by increasing their
economic interaction with the outside world through the cultivation
of illicit crops or alternative crop programs has only resulted
in armed incursions onto indigenous resguardos and government
fumigation campaigns. Additionally, indigenous leaders seeking to
eradicate the illicit crops in their communities have become targets
of the armed groups.
As a result of the escalating violence, Cauca's indigenous communities
are now organizing in order to defend their traditional culture
and the neutrality of their lands, while at the same time looking
to the government to help them improve the economic condition of
their communities. This balancing act of maintaining their traditional
culture while at the same time interacting with Colombia's economy-at-large
is made all the more difficult by a civil conflict that is being
fueled by the profitability of illicit drug crops.
Research for this article was funded in part
by the Dick
Goldensohn Fund
This article originally appeared
in Colombia Report, an online journal
that was published by the Information Network of the Americas (INOTA).
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