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Timeline of colombian armed conflict
Timeline of colombian armed conflict











timeline of colombian armed conflict

Tags: Demobilization Disarmament and Reintegration, Human Rights, Human Rights Defenders Still, the UN warns that “persisting violence continues to jeopardize the process.” Indeed, imminent threats from FARC “dissidents” is forcing the relocation of sites for demobilized guerrillas in Vistahermosa and Mesetas, Meta, a few hours’ drive south of Bogotá. In the case of attacks on former FARC combatants, the demobilization process happened six years ago now, so “people just getting on with their lives” is something of a factor. Why is it happening? Some credit may go to the nearly year-old government of Gustavo Petro, which has extended many of the country’s armed groups an opportunity to negotiate peace or demobilization, which gives them an incentive to improve their behavior toward non-combatants. This is all good news, though Colombia is still far from zero. In its latest report, the Mission counts 18 ex-combatants killed between January 1 and June 26, 2023, roughly 30 percent behind the pace of 2022, and the trend has been declining since 2020. The United Nations Verification Mission in Colombia, which produces quarterly reports on implementation of aspects of the 2016 peace accord, also found a downward trend in murders of demobilized former members of the FARC guerrilla group. That is down 25 percent from the first half of 2022. According to the count kept by the independent journalism site La Silla Vacía, 77 social leaders were murdered in the first six months of 2023.That is down 19 percent from the 114 killings that the Defensoría counted between January and June 2022.

timeline of colombian armed conflict

  • According to Colombia’s Human Rights Ombudsman’s Office ( Defensoría del Pueblo), 92 social leaders and human rights defenders were killed between January and June 2023.
  • fully visible.Two sources point to a welcome, though still woefully insufficient, decline in the number of human rights defenders and social leaders being killed in Colombia. To change this template's initial visibility, the |state= parameter may be used: This template's initial visibility currently defaults to autocollapse, meaning that if there is another collapsible item on the page (a navbox, sidebar, or table with the collapsible attribute), it is hidden apart from its title bar if not, it is fully visible.













    Timeline of colombian armed conflict