|
COLOMBIA: Women Suffer Abuse
Behind the Front Lines
By: Helda Martínez
January 23,2007 - (IPS) "The actors in the
Colombian armed conflict, in particular the paramilitary groups
and the guerrilla, employ physical, sexual and psychological violence
against women as a strategy of war," stated the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights (IACHR). This is one of the conclusions
of the IACHR's Rapporteurship on the Rights of Women. The Commission
forms part of the Organisation of American States (OAS), which cooperates
in Colombia with the non-governmental Corporación Sisma Mujer.
Some 50 civil society organisations presented updated
statistics and more detailed testimonies to add to the Rapporteurship's
information, during a visit to Colombia by the IACHR's Víctor
Abramovich, from Jan. 16 to 20. The report, "Violence and Discrimination
against Women in the Armed Conflict in Colombia", says that
"violence against women is used as an instrument to intimidate
and spread terror to communities, thereby provoking the displacement
of hundreds of families."
"Acts of violence against women include homicides,
acts of torture and markings against women who sustain affective
relationships with combatants and to obtain information. Both men
and women are the victims of crimes perpetrated by all the actors
in the armed conflict, but in the case of women, acts of physical
and psychological violence are joined by aggressions and crimes
of a sexual nature," the document says.
According to statistics from the non-governmental
Colombian Commission of Jurists, "during the January 2002 to
June 2006 period, one woman a day, on average, died in Colombia"
as a result of the political violence. "Too many violations
are being perpetrated against girls, teenagers, and adult women
in Colombia under the shadow of the conflict, and yet there is very
little awareness of this in society, or in the media, which could
help to raise awareness on this issue," Claudia Mejía,
the head of Sisma Mujer, told IPS.
The IACHR report addresses the problem of the recruitment
of girls and young women by irregular armed forces, such as the
ultra-rightwing United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC) and
the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). "Girls
are raped by members of the armed groups, subjected to forced abortions
and forced to use intrauterine devices. Paramilitary leaders 'order
the search' of girls between the ages of 12 and 14 to live with
them, provide sexual services and perform domestic duties,"
the report says.
"Everyday violence against women soars in
wartime," Mejía emphasised. But while crime rates go
up, the phenomenon continues to be ignored. In the report, the Rapporteur
states that women victims are not taken seriously, or may even be
mistreated, by the judicial branch when they come forward to make
complaints, which promotes impunity and perpetuates crime. This
statement is in agreement with a 2004 report from the Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHCHR).
The UNHCHR document says that "the majority
of violations of the rights of women and girls remain unpunished,
due to a lack of official investigations, the low number of complaints
because of shame, lack of credibility of the justice system, and
underreporting in cases of death or sexual violence." There
is an "absence of training programmes for court officials on
gender issues, and there are sexist practices in the justice system,
especially in penal matters," the UNHCHR report adds.
The IACHR Rapporteur's report, in addition to calling
for improved treatment and protection for women, acknowledges that
officials recognise the existing challenges, and that the Colombian
state has advanced in the adoption of a legislative and public policy
framework designed to protect women's rights over the last decade.
One of the government efforts mentioned was the
concern to gather reliable statistics on crimes against women through
the work of the National Institute of Legal Medicine, the Department
of National Statistics and the Presidential Advisory Office on Gender
Equality (CPEM), among others. But there is still much to be done,
according to the recommendations of the IACHR Rapporteur, the High
Commissioner for Human Rights, and even the CPEM, which oversees
government policies on women's issues. In its 2003 report "Women
- Builders of Peace and Development," the CPEM acknowledged
that women as a group suffered from high levels of inequality.
Marta Lucía Vásquez, the head of
the CPEM, told IPS that "the advances in protection that have
been achieved should be recognised," for example gains through
"government policies such as 'Democratic Security' and the
reactivation of President Álvaro Uribe's social policies."
She also pointed out that deaths of men and women occur in the ratio
of three to one, and that there are other Latin American countries
with higher rates of violence against women than Colombia's. Even
so, according to official statistics, women account for half of
those displaced from their homes because of the civil war, and four
out of ten displaced families are headed by women.
The IACHR report on Violence and Discrimination
Against Women said that "on (women's) shoulders falls the reorganisation,
care and daily hygiene tasks of the family and even the community.
Men feel unable to solve these problems and unable to do the work
they ordinarily do in their fields. This situation sometimes leads
to family conflicts."
"When resettlement is in shelters, women's
privacy is affected. Their health needs regarding menstruation and
family planning are not taken into account," according to the
report "Chocó: Territory of Wealth and Survival",
given to Rapporteur Susana Villarán by women's groups during
her June 2006 visit to Quibdó, the capital of the western
province of Chocó on the Pacific coast. While the official
figures for the number of displaced persons in Colombia are already
high, the non-governmental Consultancy on Human Rights and Displacement
(CODHES) affirms that the displaced population is more than twice
the figure published by the state.
CODHES estimates that from 1985 to December 2004,
about 3.5 million people, 51 percent of whom are women, have been
displaced from their homes because of the armed conflict. "I
am a black woman displaced from Chocó 10 years ago. I lost
my brother, who disappeared when the paramilitary forces took him
away, just because he took part in a peasant march. They forced
us to leave our lands, they also took my husband away and three
months passed without us knowing whether he was dead or alive. With
the help of the priest in my town I arrived at Barranquilla (on
the Caribbean coast) with my six children. It was very challenging
to support them...," according to a testimony included in the
Rapporteur's report.
IACHR Commissioner and Rapporteur Susana Villarán
visited Colombia in June 2005 and interviewed government authorities,
victims and their families, civil society organisations, including
indigenous and Afro-Colombian associations, and women's rights groups,
in Bogotá, in Quibdó, where most of the population
is black, and in Valledupar, capital of the northern province of
Cesar. The Rapporteur talked to indigenous people living in the
Sierra Nevada de Santa María, and after considering all the
testimonies she concluded that within the context of a high degree
of violence against women in the country, black and indigenous women
suffered even worse treatment because of their additional vulnerability
as members of ethnic minorities living in areas of outstanding natural
wealth.
Persecution by irregular armed groups is also directed
specifically at women leaders of non-governmental organisations
working to defend women's rights. "Unionised women were victims
of 15 femicides (gender-related murders), 102 death threats, 10
arbitrary detentions, 15 cases of harassment and persecution for
union activism, two attempted murders, seven forced displacements
and one kidnapping" in 2005, according to the National Union
School (ENS). The agencies involved in defending women's rights
plan to continue their efforts. "What we need is mass publicity
for this situation, which affects women, and through them their
families, and therefore the country," Mejía concluded.
From : http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=36275
|