Colombia’s national indigenous organization ONIC declared a humanitarian emergency on Friday over an escalation in ethnic violence against native Colombians. Two more were assassinated the day after.
The ONIC said Friday that 158 indigenous leaders have been assassinated since peace was signed between the government and left-wing guerrilla group FARC in December 2016.
Ninety-four of the victims were murdered after President Ivan Duque took office a year ago and the ethnic violence escalated even further, the native Colombian organization said.
ONIC
Less than 24 hours after the ONIC declared the emergency, two indigenous guards were assassinated and armed men opened fire on their community as they gathered where the men were attacked with guns and explosives, according to regional indigenous organizations.
Armed men open fire on indigenous community in southwest Colombia after assassinating guards
According to historian Oscar David Montero, who coordinated a study of violence against Colombia’s indigenous peoples for the National Center for Historical Memory, the racism that marked the Spanish colonization of the Americas in the late 1500s and early 1600s during which approximately 90% of the western hemisphere’s original population was exterminated continues to justify the extreme violence and other crimes suffered by Colombia’s original inhabitants.
Historian Oscar Davis Montero
According to the ONIC, the current violence is particularly intense in the western Choco province where almost 85% of the acts of aggression were registered.
Where most acts of aggression against native Colombians have taken place
Source: ONIC
The ONIC’s national coordinator of the indigenous guard, the authority in charge of public security in indigenous territory, urged all guards to mobilize and protect their communities.
ONIC national guard coordinator Luis Acosta
President Ivan Duque said he “energetically reject the assassinations of two members of the national guard” and blamed drug trafficking groups for the violence.
The president has categorically refused to meet with ethnic minorities or acknowledge the land disputes between indigenous peoples, large landowners, and the oil and mining industry.