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<a class="gmail-domain gmail-reader-domain" href="https://orinocotribune.com/colombia-is-bleeding-to-death/">orinocotribune.com</a>
<h1 class="gmail-reader-title">Colombia is Bleeding to Death</h1>By Alejandra Garcia – Feb 13, 2022</div><div class="gmail-content"><div class="gmail-moz-reader-content gmail-reader-show-element"><div id="gmail-readability-page-1" class="gmail-page"><div>
<p>Even though you wouldn’t know if you only followed the corporate
media, in January, violence continued to spiral in Colombia. Human
rights groups recorded an increase in attacks against police stations,
military bases and civilians, and reported on assassinations and
intimidation tactics targeting social leaders in several departments [of
the country].<span id="gmail-more-19688"></span> In February, the panorama has been no different.</p>
<p>This Latin American country is bleeding to death before the
unblinking eyes of President Iván Duque’s government. The wounds are
open, especially in three areas. The first one comprises Arauca and
North Santander, which witnessed the worst incident since January with
the massacre of at least 27 people.</p>
<p>The second zone is Cauca and Nariño, where there have been massacres,
assassinations of social leaders, and clashes between illegal armed
groups. The unrestrained violence occurring in this territory of the
country has forced the displacement of 500 people and the
self-confinement of close to 18,000 residents in the first two months of
this year.</p>
<p>The other critical territory is Urabá, which besides being the
heartland of a paramilitary group descended from the Clan del Golfo, is a
strategic corridor in the dispute for drug trafficking. In that region,
there have been 1,000 forced displacements, while close to 2,000 people
are affected because they fear leaving their homes.</p>
<p>The violence seems to have no limit and is a consequence of the acute
social inequality that plagues the country after decades of internal
conflicts, government incompetence, corruption, drug trafficking and
total compliance to the dictates of the US.</p>
<p>Back in November of 2016, a hopeful development took place when after
years of negotiation and popular consultation, then-President Juan
Manuel Santos and the now extinct Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
– People’s Army (FARC-EP) signed an agreement to end the conflict and
build stable peace in Colombia.</p>
<p>But the arrival of the ultra-right-wing Duque to power in 2018
dampened the people’s hope to achieve these goals. This loyal disciple
of former President Álvaro Uribe, and lap dog to the US, has constantly
polarized and glorified the violence, and has done everything possible
to undermine the implementation of the peace accords.</p>
<p>Six years after the signing of the agreement in Havana, Cuba,
poverty, inequality, the proliferation of illegal armed groups, and the
negligence of the State in certain regions has fueled social uncertainty
and hopelessness.</p>
<p>From 2018 to date, more than 900 social leaders have been
assassinated. Guerrillas, drug trafficking groups, and dissidents of the
extinct FARC continue to operate while Duque takes no measures to
protect the Colombian people.</p>
<p>Colombia lives under constant mass displacement, selective
assassinations, forced recruitment of children and adolescents, sexual
violence against girls and women, and other serious human rights
violations.</p>
<p>The persistent violence prompted a wave of protests in 2020.
Confrontations between police and citizens were another sign of the
tensions in the country, reflecting the lack of institutional responses
to social demands. Instead of listening to the people, Duque sent the
Mobile Anti-Riot Squad (ESMAD) to repress and kill protesters.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, analysts still have hope for the future and believe
that sustainable peace is possible, but only if the Peace Accords
accords are fulfilled and if the Colombian people get to determine their
own future without the interference of Washington. This will be the
only way to reduce economic and social inequality, something so longed
for by the Colombian people, who are tired of living in constant fear.
Colombia, placed in the heart of Latin America, needs to close its large
open wounds. They have already experienced too many years of pain.</p>
<p><em>Featured image: A child flees from paramilitary groups, Colombia. Photo: Twitter/ @almayadeen_es<br>
</em></p>
<p>(<a href="https://www.resumen-english.org/2022/02/colombia-is-bleeding-to-death/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Resumen Latinoamericano – English</a>)</p>
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