Medellin energy company EPM insists on flooding a region in northwest Colombia where victims of the armed conflict say hundreds of their loved ones could be buried in mass graves.
The locals have received support from European lawmakers, but are opposed by EPM, local authorities and paramilitary death squads.
EPM wants to flood the area on July 1 to begin operating the Hidroituango hydroelectric dam located in the north of the Antioquia province and partly bankrolled by the Inter-American Development Bank.
In the 10-year process to build the damn, EPM and Antioquia authorities have systematically violated the rights of locals and conflict victims, the people from the region and international human rights organizations say.
The local community suffered as many as 151 attacks and continue to be threatened by paramilitary groups that operate in the region.
The International Office for Human Rights Action on Colombia
The locals and European members of parliament have urged to suspend the project to allow search teams of the Prosecutor General’s Office to finish searching for the bodies of hundreds of people who were forcibly disappeared and are presumed to be buried in the area.
Members of the European Parliament
Medellin Mayor Federico Gutierrez was “annoyed” about the European call to respect the locals’ rights, according to newspaper El Espectador.
Gutierrez, whose municipal budget is largely financed by EPM, denied the multiple claims of systematic rights abuses and accused the members of the European Parliament of being radicals.
After initially claiming not having seen the letter, Gutierrez said that “nine of the Members of Parliament appearing in the letter are related to radical left-wing parties, who a few days ago also called for the release of [jailed FARC ideologue Jesus] Santrich.”
The mayor said that the flooding of the reservoir would continue as planned.