News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: Wire: Civilians Caught in Colombia's War |
Title: | Colombia: Wire: Civilians Caught in Colombia's War |
Published On: | 2000-08-30 |
Source: | Associated Press |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 10:23:31 |
CIVILIANS CAUGHT IN COLOMBIA'S WAR
NELSON MANDELA BARRIO, Colombia (AP) -- By the thousands, civilians caught
in Colombia's war have been fleeing their villages and winding up in huge
squatter camps like Nelson Mandela Barrio, outside Cartagena.
It is a sight President Clinton isn't seeing Wednesday during his visit to
the charming Spanish-colonial city of nearby Cartagena: children walking
barefoot in the mud past ramshackle huts, their bellies distended from
malnutrition.
The squalid scene underscores the desperation millions of Colombian
civilians face as the war widens and opposing sides gain strength.
While leftist guerrillas and rival right-wing paramilitary groups have
gotten stronger by profiting from the narcotics trade, government security
forces are receiving a huge injection of aid from Washington.
Human rights groups say civilians are being abused by all sides -- which is
apparent in listening to the horrific experiences of residents of Nelson
Mandela Barrio, or neighborhood.
"A group of 10 armed men entered my house, tied us up and dragged away my
son," said Juan de Dios Llorente in an interview in his hut, made of burlap
sacks strung along branches and furnished only with two hammocks.
The gunmen were members of the country's biggest rebel group, the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, de Dios Llorente said, and they
accused his son of being an informant for the army.
Three days later, a friend told de Dios Llorente that his son's body was on
a nearby farm. De Dios Llorente retrieved the body. He had been shot three
times in the back of the head.
Such is the climate of fear among Colombia's war victims that de Dios
Llorente would only tell his story in the relative privacy of his shelter.
So far, death squads have not come to Nelson Mandela Barrio, many of whose
residents are black and who respect the South African leader for his fight
to free blacks from apartheid.
The squatter camp, located in a hilly green area a few miles outside
Cartagena, is only five years old but already holds 45,000 people. Some 95
percent have been displaced by the war, aid workers say.
There is no system to care for the war refugees, and most are left to find
food and shelter on their own. Only the most malnourished children are fed
by humanitarian organizations.
The problem is mirrored throughout the country.
Nearly 2 million Colombians have fled their homes over the past 15 years.
The number of displaced people is growing annually -- last year alone,
288,000 people were displaced, according to a private monitoring group, the
Consultancy for Human Rights and Displacement.
Another 148,000 fled during the first six months of this year, the group
reported, and officials say as many as 40,000 coca-growing farmers could be
uprooted when a U.S.-backed anti-drug offensive gets underway in southern
Colombia next year.
The Rome-based World Food Program on Wednesday called for more aid for
Colombia's displaced, saying an appeal for $9 million worth of aid has only
resulted in about one quarter of the assistance required.
Some of the war refugees sought out President Clinton in Cartagena on
Wednesday.
Ruby Arroyo, 29, spent more than eight hours in Cartagena hoping to pass
Clinton a letter in which she beseeched his help for her family.
"Two years ago, the war between paramilitaries and rebels cost the lives of
humble campesinos who were brutally killed and their humble homes destroyed
and burned," the letter said. "Terror overcame us and we had to flee to
save our lives."
Arroyo's six siblings and two elderly parents, who had been rural farmers,
now sell goods on the street, work as maids and take other menial labor.
"Sir, we need your help," the letter added.
Benigna Blanco left her village of Maria la Baja two months ago, joining
dozens of her neighbors in the northern town who had fled in previous months.
She finally joined the stream of refugees because her six children, the
youngest eight years old, were becoming traumatized.
"Paramilitaries would come at night with lists of names in their hands and
shoot people in their homes," Blanco said.
Misael Munoz, 34, surveyed the expanding Nelson Mandela Barrio, ankle deep
in mud after a torrential rain.
Munoz left his hometown of Santa Marta along the Caribbean coast two months
ago after heavily armed men stormed into a neighbor's house and shot three
people dead.
"I don't know who the killers were, but even if I did I would not say,"
Munoz said. ``I'm still very unnerved by what happened."
Munoz has now uprooted his whole life. As men nearby banged branches
together with hammers to create frames for their shacks, he considered his
situation. As grim as it was, he was alive.
"It is better to be here in the mud than in a pretty casket," he said.
De Dios Llorente, meanwhile, prays that eventually his village of Curulao
will become safe enough for him to return.
"I want peace," he said. "It's the only thing I want. Peace."
NELSON MANDELA BARRIO, Colombia (AP) -- By the thousands, civilians caught
in Colombia's war have been fleeing their villages and winding up in huge
squatter camps like Nelson Mandela Barrio, outside Cartagena.
It is a sight President Clinton isn't seeing Wednesday during his visit to
the charming Spanish-colonial city of nearby Cartagena: children walking
barefoot in the mud past ramshackle huts, their bellies distended from
malnutrition.
The squalid scene underscores the desperation millions of Colombian
civilians face as the war widens and opposing sides gain strength.
While leftist guerrillas and rival right-wing paramilitary groups have
gotten stronger by profiting from the narcotics trade, government security
forces are receiving a huge injection of aid from Washington.
Human rights groups say civilians are being abused by all sides -- which is
apparent in listening to the horrific experiences of residents of Nelson
Mandela Barrio, or neighborhood.
"A group of 10 armed men entered my house, tied us up and dragged away my
son," said Juan de Dios Llorente in an interview in his hut, made of burlap
sacks strung along branches and furnished only with two hammocks.
The gunmen were members of the country's biggest rebel group, the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, de Dios Llorente said, and they
accused his son of being an informant for the army.
Three days later, a friend told de Dios Llorente that his son's body was on
a nearby farm. De Dios Llorente retrieved the body. He had been shot three
times in the back of the head.
Such is the climate of fear among Colombia's war victims that de Dios
Llorente would only tell his story in the relative privacy of his shelter.
So far, death squads have not come to Nelson Mandela Barrio, many of whose
residents are black and who respect the South African leader for his fight
to free blacks from apartheid.
The squatter camp, located in a hilly green area a few miles outside
Cartagena, is only five years old but already holds 45,000 people. Some 95
percent have been displaced by the war, aid workers say.
There is no system to care for the war refugees, and most are left to find
food and shelter on their own. Only the most malnourished children are fed
by humanitarian organizations.
The problem is mirrored throughout the country.
Nearly 2 million Colombians have fled their homes over the past 15 years.
The number of displaced people is growing annually -- last year alone,
288,000 people were displaced, according to a private monitoring group, the
Consultancy for Human Rights and Displacement.
Another 148,000 fled during the first six months of this year, the group
reported, and officials say as many as 40,000 coca-growing farmers could be
uprooted when a U.S.-backed anti-drug offensive gets underway in southern
Colombia next year.
The Rome-based World Food Program on Wednesday called for more aid for
Colombia's displaced, saying an appeal for $9 million worth of aid has only
resulted in about one quarter of the assistance required.
Some of the war refugees sought out President Clinton in Cartagena on
Wednesday.
Ruby Arroyo, 29, spent more than eight hours in Cartagena hoping to pass
Clinton a letter in which she beseeched his help for her family.
"Two years ago, the war between paramilitaries and rebels cost the lives of
humble campesinos who were brutally killed and their humble homes destroyed
and burned," the letter said. "Terror overcame us and we had to flee to
save our lives."
Arroyo's six siblings and two elderly parents, who had been rural farmers,
now sell goods on the street, work as maids and take other menial labor.
"Sir, we need your help," the letter added.
Benigna Blanco left her village of Maria la Baja two months ago, joining
dozens of her neighbors in the northern town who had fled in previous months.
She finally joined the stream of refugees because her six children, the
youngest eight years old, were becoming traumatized.
"Paramilitaries would come at night with lists of names in their hands and
shoot people in their homes," Blanco said.
Misael Munoz, 34, surveyed the expanding Nelson Mandela Barrio, ankle deep
in mud after a torrential rain.
Munoz left his hometown of Santa Marta along the Caribbean coast two months
ago after heavily armed men stormed into a neighbor's house and shot three
people dead.
"I don't know who the killers were, but even if I did I would not say,"
Munoz said. ``I'm still very unnerved by what happened."
Munoz has now uprooted his whole life. As men nearby banged branches
together with hammers to create frames for their shacks, he considered his
situation. As grim as it was, he was alive.
"It is better to be here in the mud than in a pretty casket," he said.
De Dios Llorente, meanwhile, prays that eventually his village of Curulao
will become safe enough for him to return.
"I want peace," he said. "It's the only thing I want. Peace."
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