At least 12% of Colombians are displacement victims: IDMC Report

At least 12% of Colombia’s 47 million people are victims of forced displacement, according to an Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) report published Wednesday.

Of the approximately 6.3 million people in Latin America who have been forced to flee their homes due to war or violence, 5.7 million were Colombian. Colombia, still embroiled in a complicated 50-year armed conflict between leftist guerrillas, the state, and right-wing paramilitary groups, was one of the five countries that accounted for 78% of the world’s total living displacement victims as of 2013, according to the IDMC. The IDMC pointed out that its statistics do not take into account the many Colombians killed or “disappeared” during armed conflict.

The “Global Overview” report did mention, however, that the Andean nation has made significant progress as compared to the blood-soaked years of the early 2000s, calling Colombia an “encouraging example” for other similarly troubled countries. At the turn of the century, Colombia was producing roughly 300,000 new displacements per year, a number that has dropped to 180,000 over the course of the past five years.

Many of the incidents in Colombia are “mass displacements,” meaning a group of more than ten families or 50 people from the same area. According to reports by local UNHCR field offices, b

More than 33% of the people displaced in recent years fled from the Pacific Coast, home primarily to indigenous and Afro-Colombian populations, which are disproportionately affected by the armed conflict.

MORE: Buenaventura leader in urban discplacement: NGO

According to the “Global Overview,” the majority of Colombia’s displacement is still caused by the armed conflict between guerilla groups and government forces, though “re-emerged paramilitaries and organized crime syndicates also commit significant abuses and violence against civilians.” Over 37 human rights workers were reportedly assassinated by neo-paramilitary organizations such as “Los Urabeños” in the first half of 2013 alone.

The report adds that “widespread abuses, including the recruitment of minors, sexual violence, the use of anti-personnel mines, extortion, and the targeting of human rights workers have also forced people from their homes.”

Colombia’s 2011 Victims and Land Restitution Law, which allows victims of armed conflict a legal basis for financial restitution, and its subsequent constitutional amendment in 2013 to include victims of organized crime and post-demobilization paramilitary groups (GPDP), was singled out as a prime example of a legal framework being implemented to adress the problem of IDM.

MORE: Colombia court orders legislators to amplify Victims Law

The largest obstacle facing the Colombian government, according to the report, is the violent backlash directed against land restitution by armed groups, putting many people in fear of reporting displacement. Many who do file reports are threatened and targeted by these same groups, resulting in a decrease in the number of restitution claims by victims.

The report concludes by saying that only a small percent of the “substantial amount” of international assistance Colombia receives for internally displaced peoples actually goes to humanitarian needs.

“Even given the best-case scenario in which Colombia reaches a peace agreement with the FARC, [the country’s largest rebel group, which has been negotiating a peace settlement with the Colombian government since November 2012] persistent insecurity and criminality will require a long-term international commitment to the country.”

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