Guerrilla turf war in southwest Colombia displaces more than 400

More than 400 people, mostly children, have been displaced in southwest Colombia where two FARC dissident groups are fighting over control, according to the United Nations.

The inhabitants of seven hamlets were forced to flee their homes amid fighting between the so-called “Frente Oliver Sinisterra”(FOS) and the “Gente del Comun,” two rival groups formed by former FARC fighters.

Authorities in the town of Roberto Payan are trying to provide shelter and food to the victims while the rogue guerrillas fight over territory that was abandoned by the FARC when it demobilized last year.

The rival guerrilla groups are two of almost 20 splinter factions that have refused to take part in an ongoing peace process.

While most of these groups have no more than a few dozen members, the FOS is estimated to have grown to some 500 fighters and has taken control of the Ecuadorean border.

The group of Ecuadorean ex-FARC member “Guacho” and the Gente del Comun are allegedly fighting over control of the Pacific region of the Nariño province, one of Colombia’s most important regions for the cultivation of coca, the base ingredient for cocaine.


Colombia’s frontlines of the drug war: Nariño


According to the UN’s refugee agency, among the 432 displaced are 232 children that need “protection, shelter, water, basic sanitation, and food.”

Despite the demobilization of paramilitary umbrella organization AUC between 2003 and 2006, and the demobilization of the FARC last year, Colombia continues to have the country’s largest number of internally displaced people.

This is partly due to the State’s apparent lack of capacity to assume control over abandoned FARC territory and the fact that many of the displaced farmers’ lands ended up in the hands of wealthy landowners, corporations and demobilized paramilitary chiefs who refuse to return the stolen property.

Related posts

Colombia’s prosecution confirms plea deal with jailed former UNGRD chiefs

Arsonists set home of Colombia’s land restitution chief on fire

Colombia and Russia “reactivate” bilateral ties