Colombia This Week -- June 20, 2005
Fri 10 – Teachers under threat from paras in
·
The Permanent Committee for the Defence of Human Rights in
· In a statement on their website, the National Liberation Army (ELN) denies that any ‘voluntary demobilisation’ of ELN fighters took place on 7 June, as reported in the media. The website claims that two commanders decided to demobilise to the authorities last week, and treacherously led their companions into a trap.
·
A Colombian drug smuggler wanted by the
Sat 11 – Peasants denounce 500 disappearances in Choco; Congress under scrutiny.
· Army General Mario Alberto Gutierrez, commander of the National Police in the coffee producing area (Eje Cafetero) meets with the internally displaced people from the municipality of San Jose del Palmar (Choco) and agrees to the presence of the Attorney General’s office and a Commission from the UN Human Rights Office to investigate several crimes committed in this municipality and the cases of some 500 people who have been disappeared by the armed groups acting in the area, Colprensa reports.
·
During the last year alone, 20% of the total Colombian Congressional
representatives have permitted their substitutes access to their seats for certain
voting sessions. Despite the fact that there are only 268 Congress representatives,
from July 2002 to the present, 424 people have acted as Congress representatives
in
Sun 12 - Solidarity in Medellin with NGO Corpades after attack; 50 people arrested in drug ring.
· After seven people were killed in Apartado in a bomb attack against the NGO Corpades (Corporation for peace and development) last week, various social organisations from the network ‘Pueblos hermanos, lazos visibles’ organise an event in support of this organisation. These organisations consider that the attack was intended ‘to silence the voices of those that add analysis to the present situation’, El Colombiano reports.
· Nearly 50 people are arrested after police break up a Colombian drugs ring accused of trafficking more than US$ 50 million of narcotics into the United States, the U.S. Federal authorities reports. A two-year investigation of the ring running through the United States, Canada and Colombia resulted in charges against drug importers, exporters and Colombian money brokers who funnelled drug proceeds through a black market peso exchange, said U.S. Attorney David Kelley, Reuters reports.
·
Colombian Army General Reinaldo Castellanos announces a Colombian
version of the famous deck of cards created for
Mon 13 – M. Frühling urges changes in ‘Justice and Peace’ bill; death threats against CREDHOS.
· Stressing that there is a need to make some important changes in the Justice and Peace law proposal, director of the UN Human Rights Office for Colombia Michael Frühling presents a report proposing changes in 16 of the 71 articles of the law, adding a direct message to the government of President Uribe Velez that giving political status to the paramilitaries will not strengthen but weaken the Colombian democratic system. He also said that charges for narcotrafficking and crimes against humanity should be processed through the regular justice system and not through the Justice and Peace law, El Nuevo Siglo reports.
·
In an urgent action, Amnesty International reports that two members
of the NGO CREDHOS (Regional Human Rights Corporation) David Ravelo Crespo and
student leader Georgina Morales, have received death threats. In recent months
a number of threatening telephone calls have been received by the CREDHOS office
in the city of
·
An armed group that entered a farm near Abejorral in
Tues 14 – Government ‘aid guidelines’ cause outrage; Colombian victims claim their rights
·
A document sent to embassies present in
·
With a photographic exhibition called ‘Don’t forget’, 15
of the most prominent Colombian NGOs working with victims of the Colombian armed
conflict launched the National movement of victims of crimes against humanity
and violation of human rights. A hundred pictures of people killed and disappeared
were exhibited in the Plaza de Bolivar, in the centre of
·
South America's cocaine output rose by 2% last year, bucking
a five year downward trend as increases in
·
In a meeting in
·
The draft law for the demobilisation of paramilitary groups
that the Colombian Congress has begun to debate will leave the underlying structures
of those groups intact, Human Rights Watch says. The bill drastically limits
time frames for investigation of paramilitary crimes, thus making it nearly
impossible to hold paramilitaries accountable for them. Even if convicted, paramilitary
commanders could get away with serving as little as two years for all their
crimes, without having to confess, fully disclose their knowledge of the criminal
networks they run, or even turn over all their massive illegally acquired wealth.
“The current bill does little but serve the interests of paramilitary leaders:
it doesn’t touch their mafia-like networks or the wealth that fuels their groups’
activities,” said Jose Miguel Vivanco,
·
In a parliamentary question submitted by British MP John
·
Conservative Party Congressman Santiago Castro says it is impossible
to please human rights groups while offering enough benefits to keep the paramilitaries
negotiating. "We are not dealing with defeated armies. We are dealing with
standing armies," Castro said. "So we are not going to be able to
impose every condition that the public, both in
Thurs 16 – Navy: paramilitaries seek drug profits; ICG report warns Uribe on ‘peace blackmail’.
·
Paramilitary leaders are rushing to sell millions of dollars'
worth of cocaine before they demobilise in order to be able to retire wealthy
from
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In its latest report on
Colombia This Week is a news summary produced and distributed by ABColombia Group. Sources include daily Colombian, US, European and Latin American newspapers, and reports from non-governmental organisations and the UN System. The content does not necessarily reflect the views of the ABColombia Group.
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