|
May 5, 2003
Colombia's Other Enemy: Human Rights Workers
by Garry Leech
Since President Alvaro Uribe assumed office it has become open
season on human rights workers in Colombia. According to Human Rights
Watch, 17 human rights defenders were killed in 2002, the most since
1997. The past year has also seen a ratcheting up of the rhetoric
from administration and military officials labeling non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) as subversive organizations affiliated with
Colombia's guerrilla groups. While NGO work has always been dangerous
in Colombia, it is now proving to be more deadly than ever. The
new Washington-backed "war on terror" has revitalized
Cold War strategies commonly implemented under the Southern Cone
dictatorships of the 1970s and in Central America during the 1980s.
In the black and white worldview of the Uribe administration and
Colombian military officials, NGO workers are guerrillas. And public
accusations of this nature by government and military officials
provide death squads with a green light to kill NGO workers with
impunity.
On
April 10, according to Human Rights Watch, during a speech at a
conference sponsored by the United States Army in Washington, D.C.,
Colombian Army Brigadier General José Arturo Camelo, "Accused
human rights NGOs of waging a 'legal war' against the military.
Further, he claimed that human rights groups were 'friends of subversives'
and that they formed part of a larger strategy coordinated by the
guerrillas." General Camelo's statements cannot be written-off
as an isolated incident. Numerous high-ranking officials and influential
Colombians have made similar comments over the past year, among
them Pedro Juan Moreno Villa, President Uribe's close personal advisor
and former vice-governor of Antioquia during Uribe's tenure as governor
of that department.
In an interview with the Colombian magazine Cromos, Moreno
suggested, "An intelligence center should search out ... information
that has been developed by analysts who are familiar with and experts
on each one of the targets: FARC, ELN, EPL, drug traffickers, self-defense
forces, the NGOs and common criminals. There should be intelligence
monitoring of NGOs, because they are the ones who have trashed this
country. Many are leftists. The subversives and [the] violent create
these mechanisms to seize power."
While it may be difficult for some to believe that such an influential
public figure would so blatantly label NGOs as targets in the same
sentence as the FARC, ELN, EPL, drug traffickers, self-defense forces
and common criminals, it has clearly become a strategy of the Uribe
administration.
President Uribe has apparently heeded the advice of his friend
Moreno and begun actively working to 'legally' restrict the activities
of NGOs. According to Jorge Rojas, director of the Colombian NGO,
Consultancy on Human Rights and Displacement (CODHES), "Uribe
has put a bill before Congress that, if passed, will set up a system
to monitor, control, and restrict the autonomy of NGOs." But
as Rojas also points out, the Uribe administration's harassment
is not limited to domestic NGOs, "The government has also obstructed
international organizations that support the work of Colombian NGOs;
for example, the government recently deported visiting representatives
of international organizations on the grounds that they were 'participating
in public demonstrations.' To further restrict international NGOs,
the government has increased the bureaucratic procedures and requirements
needed to obtain visas."
The obstacles and dangers faced by NGO workers, especially human
rights defenders, in Colombia are enormous. According to Adam Isacson
of the Washington-based Center for International Policy, "In
a country where more than 95 percent of crimes go unpunished and
the powerful go to great lengths to protect their impunity, this
is challenging and often dangerous work. A human rights defender
is assassinated about once every month. Dozens of the country's
most effective activists and experts have been forced into exile
in recent years."
A recent United Nations report stated that the direct involvement
of the Colombian military in human rights abuses has risen since
Uribe came to power. This increase in human rights violations by
the Colombian Armed Forces corresponds with increased levels of
U.S. military aid being provided by the Bush administration. Once
again history is repeating itself as a right-wing Latin American
leader and a U.S.-backed military closely allied with right-wing
death squads are actively intimidating and even physically eliminating
anyone who dares to stand up for social justice and human rights.
Ironically, this latest wave of state-sponsored terrorism is being
justified under the "war on terror."
This article originally appeared
in Colombia Report, an online journal
that was published by the Information Network of the Americas (INOTA).
Back to Top .
Comments
Copyright © 2003 Colombia
Journal. All rights reserved.
|