UN to assume more active role in protecting Colombia’s social leaders

Inspector General Fernando Carrillo (L) and UN Human Rights chief Alberto Brunori. (Image: Fernando Carrillo)

The United Nations has announced it will begin to work more closely to protect Colombian social leaders, who have in recent years been the targets of unprecedented violence.

The Colombian Inspector General and the Ombudsman agreed to work with the UN mission to Colombia to increase disciplinary action and allow the UN help with investigations.

The effort will begin with a series of “roundtables for life” across the country with community action boards, where many of the threatened social leaders work, and the agreements that have been signed at this point only represent a commitment to work together to address the violence.

Inspector General’s human rights delegate Carlos Medina

According to a press release, there are currently disciplinary proceedings against mayors and governors for failing to act on the stigmatization of social leaders that will soon become public.

Letter of understanding with Inspector General

The targeted assassination of social leaders has been exponentially increasing, according to reports Somos Defensores. In the first quarter of 2019 violence against social leaders increased by 66%. In 2018, there were 155 social leaders assassinated and almost 600 hundred received death threats.


2018 was one of the worst years for Colombia’s social leaders, and 2019 is already exponentially worse


The problem has drawn attention from not just the UN, but also the International Criminal Court, which is considering opening a case, after social leaders and more than 500 supporters across Europe

The issue has also been in the spotlight in Colombia, where this week 3,000 social leaders gathered in a humanitarian refuge in Bogota, opened to demand increased international for the violence.

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