Fw: Fi 210/10 Colobia "PARAMILITARIES THREATEN COMMUNITIES" Firma e invia l'appello in allegato
- Subject: Fw: Fi 210/10 Colobia "PARAMILITARIES THREATEN COMMUNITIES" Firma e invia l'appello in allegato
- From: "nello margiotta" <nellomargiotta55 at virgilio.it>
- Date: Tue, 24 May 2011 18:09:18 +0200
----- Original Message -----
From: ua at amnesty.it
To: ua at amnesty.it
Sent: Monday, May 23, 2011 12:11 PM
Subject: Fi 210/10 Colobia "PARAMILITARIES THREATEN COMMUNITIES"
Firma e invia l'appello in allegato
Date:
17 May 2011
URGENT
ACTION
PARAMILITARIES THREATEN COMMUNITIES
Afro-descendant and Indigenous communities in the
Curvaradó and Jiguamiandó River Basins in North West Colombia are being
threatened and harassed by paramilitaries.
On 20
April 2011, around 150 paramilitaries set up camp in Curvaradó River Basin,
Chocó Department. They have since used this camp as a base for operations in the
area and despite a heavy military presence and patrols by the XVIII Brigade of
the Colombian Army, no apparent attempt has been made by the authorities to
confront them.
On 5
May, 11 paramilitaries surrounded Sixta Tulia Pérez and Blanca
Rebolledo, two women leaders of the Afro-descendant community in Caracolí,
in the Curvaradó River Basin. The paramilitaries tried to rip their clothes off
and grabbed a child who was with them. One of them hit Sixta Tulia Pérez with a
whip. They told them: “This is a warning … the boss has money to order the
government what to do… to get you out of here.” Later that day the same
paramilitaries threatened women leaders in front XVII Brigade soldiers, who did
not react when asked to help. On 7 May, the same perpetrators tried to surround
Blanca Rebolledo again. She ran away and sought refuge with community leader
Liria Rosa García. When the paramilitaries realized that they had phoned
for help, they said they would cut-off Liria Rosa's head.
On 4
May Albeiro Jumi, the secretary of the governor of the Indigenous
community of Alto Guayabal, was accused of being a guerrilla by a police officer
as he was travelling to the town of Mutatá, Antioquia Department. The community
of Alto Guayabal is part of the Urada- Jiguamiandó Indigenous Reservation
(resguardo) situated next to the Afro-descendent area of Jiguamiandó.
Members of the resguardo have recently been accused of being “guerrillas
and son-of-a-bitch informers” by soldiers of the XVII Brigade. Amnesty
International fears these accusations could encourage physical attacks on
members of the resguardo, especially on those who have opposed the
development of international mining interests in the area, at a time of
large-scale paramilitary presence in the area.
PLEASE
WRITE IMMEDIATELY in Spanish or your own language:
PLEASE
SEND APPEALS BEFORE 27 JUNE 2011 TO:
President
Presidente
Juan Manuel Santos
Presidente
de la República, Palacio de Nariño, Carrera 8 No.7-26, Bogotá,
Colombia
Fax: +57 1
596 0631
Salutation: Dear President Santos/
Excmo.
Sr. Presidente Santos
Minister
of Interior and Justice
Señor
Germán Vargas Lleras
Ministerio
Del Interior y De Justicia
Carrera 9a.
No. 14-10, Bogotá
Colombia
Fax: +57 1
599 8961
Salutation: Dear Minister Vargas /Estimado Sr.
Ministro Vargas
Minister
of Agriculture and Rural Development
Señor Juan
Camilo Restrepo
Ministerio
de Agricultura y Desarrollo Rural , Avenida
Jiménez No 7-65 , Piso 3, Bogotá, Colombia
Fax: +57 1
286 2649
Salutation: Dear Minister Restrepo /Estimado Sr.
Ministro Restrepo
Also
send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country. Please
check with your section office if sending appeals after the above date. This is
the first update of UA 201/10. Further information: http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR23/029/2010/en
URGENT
ACTION
PARAMILITARIES THREATEN COMMUNITIES
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION
Since
the 1990s, paramilitaries, either acting alone or in collusion with the armed
forces, have been responsible for killings, death threats and the forced
displacement of Afro-descendant and Indigenous People living in the Jiguamiandó
and Curvaradó River Basins and the resguardo of Urada- Jiguamiandó. As a
means to guarantee their safety, members of the Afro- descendant communities of
Curvaradó and Jiguamiandó created Humanitarian Zones to assert their rights as
civilians not to be drawn into the conflict. The communities have sought to
defend their land rights and prevent the expansion of illegal African palm
plantations and other economic activities within their territory. Many of their
members have been threatened and killed as a result. In the last couple of years
a number of people living in the Jiguamiandó and Curvaradó region who have
complained about the occupation of their lands by African Palm growers and other
economic interests have been killed by paramilitaries, who continue to maintain
a strong presence in the region despite the large army presence. Those living in
the resguardo of Urada-Jiguamiandó have also been subject to repeated
death threats and several have been killed since the late 1990s.
The
recent large-scale paramilitary presence an hour away from the Humanitarian
Zones of Caracolí, Tesoro-Camelias and Caño Claro- Andalucía, and the area of El
Firme and No Hay Como Dios, in the Curvaradó River Basin, comes in the wake of
the visit of government ministers to the area to make commitments to return
lands stolen, often violently, by paramilitaries operating on behalf of African
Palm, banana and cattle-ranching interests operating in the region. The return
of these lands was ordered by the Constitutional Court in a ruling in May 2010.
Reports indicate that paramilitaries are plotting to kill Afro-descendants
campaigning for the restitution of stolen lands. In recent weeks, attempts have
been made on the lives of leaders and people living in the Humanitarian Zones.
In 2008, Walberto Hoyos Rivas, a leader of the Curvaradó River Basin Community
was killed by paramilitaries.
Afro-descendant communities, along with Indigenous
People and peasant farmer communities are among those most affected by
Colombia's long running internal armed conflict. They have been subjected to
enforced disappearance by the security forces or by paramilitaries (either
acting alone or in collusion with the armed forces) and abducted by guerrilla
groups.
The
Inter-American Court of Human Rights of the Organization of American States has
repeatedly called on the Colombian authorities to take appropriate measures to
guarantee the safety of members of the Afro- descendant communities of Curvaradó
and Jiguamiandó. However, the Colombian authorities have failed to take
effective action to implement the Court's requests.
FU on
UA: 201/10 Index: AMR 23/016/2011 Issue Date: 17 May 2011
President Presidente Juan Manuel Santos Presidente de la República, Palacio de Nariño, Carrera 8 No.7-26,
Bogotá, Colombia Fax:
+57 1 596 0631 Dear President Santos, I am writing to you as supporter of Amnesty International, the non
governmental organization which since 1961 has been working in defense of human
rights, wherever they are violated. I call on you to guarantee the safety of the Afro descendant and
Indigenous communities of the Collective Land Titles of Curvaradó and
Jiguamiandó and the Resguardo of Urada-Jiguamiandó through measures deemed
appropriate by those under threat. I demand a full and impartial investigation into the death threats
and harassment with those responsible brought to justice. I remind you that their obligations to human rights defenders are
laid out in the UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, the Organization of
American States Human Rights Defenders in the I urge you to take immediate action to dismantle paramilitary groups
and break their links with the security forces, in line with stated government
commitments and recommendations made by the UN and other bodies.
Thank you for your attention. |
Allegato Rimosso
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