Armed conflict and political violence are threatening the participation of Colombia’s war victims in the upcoming elections.
Victim representatives from war-torn regions are vying for 16 seats in the House of Representatives in the March 13 elections.
These transitional seats were created as part of an ongoing peace process that sought to boost victim representation in Congress until 2030.
This political participation is being complicated by increased violence in the countryside, according to the United Nations’ human rights office in Colombia.
The UN agency registered a sharp increase in massacres and forced displacement in the so-called PDET regions where victim representatives are running for Congress.
United Nations’ human rights office
Victim representatives from the priority region around the Caribbean city of Santa Marta asked to postpone the elections because of the violence.
Paramilitary group AGC reportedly banned opposition to Jorge Rodrigo Tovar, the son of jailed warlord “Jorge 40,” in parts of the Caribbean region.
newspaper La Nueva Prensa
Another candidate in the region, Wiliam Romero, is a heir of late crime lord Lucas Gnecco, according to news website La Silla Vacia.
Victim representatives from the region chained themselves to the regional registrar’s office in the city of Valledupar to demand that the elections be postponed.
In the northeastern Arauca province, armed men briefly kidnapped a victim representative last week.
In the southern Tolima province, now-defunct guerrilla group FARC and regional “clans” have been endorsing candidates, a victim representative told Colombia Reports.
More than three quarters of the approximately 400 candidates in the elections for victims were assigned bodyguards, according to National Registrar Alexander Vega.
But voters are expected to choose their congressional representatives without basic security guarantees.