Locals from northeast Colombia begged Ivan Duque not to militarize their region, claiming this would only escalate violence, but the president ignored them. Within a week, more than 350 people have fled and another 400 are caught in the crossfire, according to the United Nations.
Duque visited Catatumbo, a region in the northeast of Colombia on the border with Venezuela, Sunday last week to announce the arrival of 5,000 soldiers he said would restore peace in the region that has been neglected by the state since people can remember.
President Ivan Duque
Locals fiercely rejected the militarization of Catatumbo, claiming that similar military offensives ordered by former President Juan Manuel Santos earlier this year failed to restore peace, and that guerrilla violence only escalated.
Duque sends 5000 troops to northeast Colombia days after locals beg not to militarize region
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Less than a week after Duque’s visit, the United Nations confirmed what the locals feared; the displacement of 368 people from the Hacari municipality.
The UN’s humanitarian organization OCHA said another 400 people were unable to flee because fighting between guerrilla groups prevented safe passage.
OCHA
The United Nations said that the fighting taking place in Hacari is between the country’s last-standing guerrilla group ELN and dissidents of the EPL, a guerrilla group that formally demobilized in 1991.
The two groups have been fighting over territorial control since March this year after the security forces failed to assume control in the region after the demobilization of the FARC, the guerrilla group that demobilized last year.
Where did Duque’s 5000 soldiers go?
It is unclear what happened to Duque’s military reinforcements; the United Nations reported no military involvement in either the combat or attempts to protect the civilians currently caught in the crossfire.
Locals said that the military, which has been bogged down by corruption and organizational chaos, has long failed to provide security, no matter how many soldiers Bogota sends.
NGO Progresar
According to OCHA, local authorities are working with the Norwegian Refugee Council and the Inspector General’s Office to attend the victims, who are allegedly short of food and other basic necessities like mattresses. The national government was not reported to be involved in the attempts to help the victims.
Duque on Saturday visited the west of the country, which has also been submerged in violence, saying that his government is “setting the example.”