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COLOMBIA: Defending Women's Defenders
June 9, 2008 - (IPS) After nearly six years of
the "democratic security" policy of the government of
rightwing President Álvaro Uribe, women activists in Colombia
are as vulnerable to human rights abuses as ever, said female rights
defenders who met recently in the Colombian capital.
Some 50 peasant, indigenous and Afro-Colombian representatives of
social movements and women's groups from around the country came
to Bogotá on Friday, Jun. 6 to take part in a "workshop
on strategies for the protection of women human rights defenders
in Colombia", where they shared their experiences with female
activists from Asia, Africa, Europe and the rest of Latin America.
The workshop formed part of the International Campaign on Women
Human Rights Defenders. The campaign, which was launched in 2004,
is aimed at the recognition and protection of women activists, based
on the premise that women fighting for human rights and particularly
women's rights face specific dangers and abuses because of their
gender.
The Colombian women who participated in the workshop face dangers
like murder, forced disappearance, rape, torture and forced displacement.
"Even thinking has become a cause for being attacked,"
said Pilar Sánchez from the eastern province of Boyacá,
where the far-right paramilitaries and the armed forces have a marked
presence.
"We women are abused for everything -- for taking on leadership
roles, for defending our rights, those of our children, those of
our community. But also because of sex, religion -- everything.
In border areas it's even worse, because we have to face the guerrillas,
the 'paras' (paramilitaries), and the army," said Sánchez.
"Uribe's policies have brought greater insecurity for women.
The misnamed 'demobilisation' of paramilitary groups, which actually
continue to maintain control in regional administrative and judicial
structures, has had an especially negative effect on women and girls,"
María Eugenia Ramírez, of the Bogotá-based
Latin American Institute for Alternative Legal Services (ILSA),
told IPS.
In 2007, for example, activist Yolanda Izquierdo was killed in the
northwestern province of Córdoba.
Izquierdo represented hundreds of peasant farmers who were demanding
the return of their land, which was seized by paramilitary groups
led by Salvatore Mancuso, one of the paramilitary chiefs extradited
to the United States in May to face drug trafficking charges.
And in February 2007, Carmen Santana was murdered in the northern
province of La Guajira and four other women were killed in other
areas, all for the same cause: their activism in seeking the restitution
of their land, in compliance with the Peace and Justice Law.
That law governed the recent demobilisation of paramilitary groups
that are allies of the government forces in the fight against Colombia's
leftist guerrillas. Under the Peace and Justice Law, paramilitary
leaders who confess to all of their crimes and make reparations
to their victims are eligible for light prison sentences of no more
than eight years.
But according to the activists taking part in Friday's workshop,
the law has not been complied with.
The Constitutional Court ordered changes to the law, such as a loss
of legal benefits for demobilised paramilitaries who conceal crimes
when they testify.
But the government's surprise extradition in May of the top paramilitary
chiefs cut short several key prosecutions that would have helped
shed light on many of the most appalling war crimes committed in
Colombia's armed conflict over the last two decades.
Uribe's controversial "democratic security" policy has
extended state control to territory under the influence of the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the main rebel group, and has drawn
local residents into the counterinsurgency effort by arming "peasant
soldiers". It has also come under criticism from human rights
groups, who say direct participation in human rights violations
by the security forces has increased.
The Escuela Nacional Sindical (National Trade Union School) reports
that 13 female trade union leaders were killed in the first 11 months
of 2006, 15 in 2005 and 16 in 2004.
Yolanda Becerra of the Organización Femenina Popular (OFP),
a women's peace group whose members for years have received threats
in the northeastern oil-rich river port city of Barrancabermeja,
was attacked in her home in November 2007.
Members of the paramilitary group Águilas Negras (Black Eagles),
which emerged in the wake of the demobilisation process, "broke
into my apartment, destroyed documents, threatened and tortured
me psychologically, and took me out of the city," Becerra told
IPS.
"But they didn't break my will. From Bucaramanga (the capital
of the northeastern province of Santander), I have continued to
work, fully committed to defending life and democracy," she
added.
"Anyway, I say I'm in a good mood because I am never threatened
all by myself," she joked. "They always threaten me along
with respected, well-known figures, like (Jesuit) Father Francisco
de Roux."
Not only community leaders and activists are targeted by the violence,
but also ordinary people living in regions where the leftist guerrillas
have traditionally maintained control.
"We have put in place early warning and protection systems,
and work constantly" to defend women activists, said Ramírez.
"Last year, we managed to get eight women and their families
out of the country because of the repeated threats against them.
But the situation is very serious."
Psychologist Claudia Girón said six women community leaders
and activists have been killed, and many more have received death
threats, in areas near the capital since the Mar. 6 national march
against state and paramilitary violence.
Girón is the wife of Iván Cepeda, the head of the
National Movement for Victims of State Crimes (MOVICE), which organised
the Mar. 6 march.
"For that reason I am calling on the international bodies to
stay alert to the situation in Colombia," Girón told
the audience at the workshop.
Swedish Ambassador Lena Nordstrom said "we will continue working,
as we have in recent years, on behalf of Colombian women affected
by forced displacement and rights violations. This is a strong commitment
for my country," she said.
Ramírez said her group would continue pressing for enforcement
of existing laws in Colombia and for the implementation of the recommendations
of the United Nations special rapporteur on violence against women
and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
"We are also putting into practice protection mechanisms among
ourselves, and meetings like these ones are important sustenance
for the soul," said Ramírez.
Sumila Abeyke, a representative of the International Campaign on
Women Human Rights Defenders, said efforts would continue to be
made to strengthen strategies aimed at protecting women victims
and human rights activists.
"This is a challenge that we will face, with a sense of solidarity,"
she said.
Abeyke underlined the commitment to "tell these stories throughout
our networks," in order to maintain "a sense of solidarity,
and to continue watching out for each other, overcoming the real
and imaginary borders that have been imposed on us."
The main groups involved in the International Campaign are Amnesty
International, Women Living Under Muslim Laws (WLUML), International
Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC), International
Service for Human Rights (ISHR), the World Organisation Against
Torture (OMCT), the Centre for Women's Global Leadership (CWGL),
Forum Asia, Inform, Frontline, International League for Human Rights,
Amanitare, Isis-Women's International Cross-Cultural Exchange, and
the Latin American and Caribbean Committee for the Defence of Women's
Rights (CLADEM).
From:http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=42720
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