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NEWS & LETTERS, May 2002 

Afro-Colombian struggle for land and justice

Colombia has 40 million people—26% of them of African descent, mostly in the Pacific region. Since the period of slavery, we have shared that area with indigenous Native Americans.

Fifty years ago, a law was passed that people willing to invest in that area could settle there. People began buying small land holdings from Blacks, peasants and indigenous people and turning them into big ranches for cattle and tourists. Private enterprises began exploiting natural resources. Many who lived there were forced into poverty in city slums.

In 1991, Colombia adopted a new Constitution. Blacks were not represented in that Constituent Assembly, but we asked the indigenous representatives to take up the defense of our culture and land rights. They won some recognition of our rights that were small, but important.

In 1993, a law was passed that said that the Black population should delineate the areas where it had lived and apply for titles. The law also said that the government must recognize the Black population's rights and devote money to social spending in consultation with the communities.

The community organizations met resistance from those who had been exploiting natural resources in our region such as gold and wood. Communities demanded title to the land. Since then we've experienced assassinations and expulsion by military groups paid by political and business interests.

My organization won the first collective titles in that region. Seven days later, at 5:00 AM on Dec. 13, 1996, paramilitary groups arrived in my town, Riosucio, intent on murdering the leaders and their families. Many were taken from their beds and paraded naked through the streets. Anyone who resisted was killed. The shouts woke me up. I ran to take refuge in the swamp along with many others.

At 8:00 AM, army helicopters started patrolling. The paramilitaries radioed the pilots to attack the swamp, claiming the people were guerrillas. The army attacked us with bombs and rifles, killing many people. Those who survived stayed in the water for three days until hunger and desperation forced us out. Some of us sneaked through the town and reached a rural community across the river. I recuperated there, then fled to Bogota, where I live today.

Two months later, in February 1997, the paramilitaries and army attacked the rural communities in the region and massacred an unknown number of people. More than 20,000 people left the area. Not a single person remained. Today, some are living in Panama, Ecuador, Venezuela, and many are in the big cities.

People who survived the attacks from the Pacific region of Colombia organized the Association of Displaced Afro-Colombians (AFRODES) to fight for our territory. AFRODES helps orient families arriving in the cities. We also work for our return to our home. I head the organization in Bogota, which began in 1999, and have had two attempts on my life. We have requested assistance from the national government, but they say they don't have the economic resources.

Last year, the U.S. government gave Colombia $1.3 billion for "Plan Colombia"—80% goes for arms. Those arms are being used to attack peasants. They are spraying the croplands with pesticides prohibited in the U.S. and destroying what they grow for subsistence. Chemicals get into the rivers, which causes health problems for people and livestock.

We need the solidarity of organizations internationally who, like us, fight for justice, because our voices are not heard in our country.

—Marino Cordoba

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