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CHAPTER VII
THE RIGHT TO LIFE
MASSACRES RECORDED IN 1990 1/12 ANTIOQUIA Six people were murdered in the Riogrande district, Santa Rosa
de Osos jurisdiction. Author:
"MUERTE A REVOLUCIONARIOS DEL NORDESTE. 1/20 ANTIOQUIA Eleven people murdered on a ranch in the village of Calderas, Gómez
Plata jurisdiction. Author:
La Ramada. 1/28 CORDOBA Six peasant farmers murdered in the hamlet of Patio Bonito,
between Chinú and San Andrés de Sotavento.
Author: ALFA 83. 2/2 CUNDINAMARCA Seven people murdered at Guayabetal, Quebrada Blanca sector, on
the Bogota-Villavicencio road. Author:
AUTODEFENSA LOS GAITANES. 2/3 SANTANDER A common grave is discovered at Hoyo Mamayo, San Vicente de
Chucurí area, containing the remains of approximately 10 people. Author: MAS. 2/3 ANTIOQUIA Seven people murdered on the Medellín-Envigado road.
Author: MAS. 2/12 CHOCO Six people murdered on the banks of the Atrato river, in the
jurisdiction of the municipalities of Bellavista and Quibdó.
Author: LOS
TANGUEROS. 2/17 CUNDINAMARCA Seven people murdered on the Planadas ranch, Village of Cubaché,
jurisdiction of the municipality of Yacopí.
Another four people were wounded.
Author: LOS
TISNADOS. 2/23 SANTANDER Five people murdered in the Magdalena river, near
Barrancabermeja (Santander). The
bodies showed signs of torture. Author:
MAS. 2/24 META Six people murdered in the village of Cumaral, jurisdiction of
the municipality of Medellín del Ariari.
Author: EJERCITO
ROJO FASCISTA. 2/27 CHOCO Six people murdered in the Unguía main square.
They were members of the Unión Patriótica. Author: LOS
TANGUEROS. 3/19 ANTIOQUIA Five people murdered in the Alfonso López district of Apartadó.
Five others were wounded.
Author: MUERTE A
REVOLUCIONARIOS DEL NORDESTE. 5/6 GUAVIARE Thirteen people murdered in El Capricho, jurisdiction of San
José del Guaviare. Author:
EJERCITO ROJO FASCISTA. 5/10 BOYACA
Six unidentified people killed on the Muzo-Chiquinquirá road.
They were travelling in a car.
Author: GRUJUSBOY. 5/9 PUTUMAYO Nine people murdered in the village of El Cairo, jurisdiction
of the municipality La Hormiga. Author:
AUTODEFENSA DE CHANCHI. 6/23 ANTIOQUIA 19 people murdered in the Oporto tavern in Envigado. Author: BANDA
SICARIOS SEGURIDAD Y CONTROL. 6/25 CAUCA Six people murdered in the San Juanito District, jurisdiction
of Mercaderes. Author:
AUTODEFENSA MORALES Y CAJIBIO. 6/28 PUTUMAYO
Four indigenous persons killed in Churuyaco, Brisas de Quebradón
district, jurisdiction of Orito.
Author: AUTODEFENSA
DE CHANCHI. 7/6 PUTUMAYO Nine peasant farmers killed in the village of El Cairo, San
Miguel Inspection, La Hormiga jurisdiction.
Their homes were also burned down.
Author: AUTODEFENSA
DE CHANCHI. 7/11 VALLE Seven people murdered in the La Tulla district, jurisdiction of
the municipality of Bolívar. Author:
BANDA DEL NORTE DEL VALLE. 10/13 ANTIOQUIA Seven people murdered in the Castilla district of Medellín. Another six were wounded.
Author: MAS. 10/18 CAUCA Four unidentified persons murdered at the La Argentina mill,
Ortegal district, jurisdiction of Miranda.
Author: FRENTE
AMISTAD JUVENIL. 10/25 CORDOBA Twelve people murdered in Tierralta.
Author: LOS
TANGUEROS 12/15 ANTIOQUIA Twelve people murdered in a public establishment called Sturpu,
in Itagui. Another six
people were wounded. Author:
MUERTE A REVOLUCIONARIOS DEL NORDESTE. 12/14 ANTIOQUIA Eight people murdered in a public establishment in the San
Antonio de Prado district, jurisdiction of Medellín.
Author: LOS
MACHOS. 12/14 VALLE Five people murdered in La Primavera district, Bolívar
jurisdiction. Author:
FRENTE AMISTAD JUVENIL. 12/15 ANTIOQUIA Seven people murdered in the Puerto Bélgica district,
municipality of Cáceres. Author:
MUERTE A REVOLUCIONARIOS DEL NORDESTE.
MASSACRES RECORDED IN 1991 1/9 ANTIOQUIA Seven people murdered in Medellín.
Author: LOS CARIÑOSITOS. 2/1 ANTIOQUIA Seven people murdered in Medellín.
Author: BANDA LOS
GACHAS. 2/1 CUNDINAMARCA Five people murdered on the Chaguaní-Vian-i road.
Author: LOS
CACHACOS. 2/19 RISARALDA Eight people murdered in the Cauca River, near Marsella. Author: LOS
MAGNIFICOS. 2/23 TOLIMA Six people killed, among them ROSALBA CAMACHO, a Council Member
of the Unión Patriótica, in the village of El Motoso, jurisdiction
of Prado. Author:
ROJO ATA. 2/24 ANTIOQUIA Five people murdered in a Medellín square.
Another six people wounded.
Author: MAS. 2/25 BOYACA Five people murdered at the place known as El Peñón, Macanal
jurisdiction. Earlier
they had been abducted at Garagoa.
Author: GRUPO
COSCUEZ ADENTRO. 2/26 ANTIOQUIA Nine people murdered in Medellín.
Author: LOS KILES. 4/12 CUNDINAMARCA Seven unidentified persons killed at El Pin, Santandercito
district,
Soacha jurisdiction. Author:
AUTODEFENSA USME. 4/13 ATLANTICO Seven people killed on the Barranquilla-Puerto Colombia road.
Author: LOS TESOS. 5/21 ANTIOQUIA Seven people murdered at La Ceja.
Author: BANDA
SICARIOS SEGURIDAD Y CONTROL. 5/29 CUNDINAMARCA Five people murdered in Vergara jurisdiction.
Author: LOS
GAITANES. 6/2 VALLE Four people killed in the village of Jordancito, Buenaventura
jurisdiction (Valle). Author:
LOS PAISAS. 6/2 NORTE DE SANTANDER Four people killed in Urimaco district, Cúucuta jurisdiction.
Author: BANDERA
ROJA. 6/19 CAUCA
Five people murdered at El Salado, in the village of Loma
Redonda, Jambaló jurisdiction. They
had been abducted there on June 17.
Author: FRENTE
AMISTAD JUVENIL. 6/26 VALLE Five people killed in Palmaseca district, on the Rozo-Palmira
road. Author:
BANDA DEL NORTE DEL VALLE. 7/15 RISARALDA Six people killed at Puente Tierra, in the village of Planes,
Santuario jurisdiction. Author:
BANDA DE OLMEDO. 7/23 MAGDALENA Five people murdered in the Pozo de la Danta region, Ciénaga
jurisdiction. Two
children were wounded. Author:
LOS CHAMIZOS. 7/28 CAUCA Four unidentified people murdered on the La Suiza hacienda,
Puerto Tejada jurisdiction. Author:
AUTODEFENSA MORALES Y CAJIBIO. 7/30 BOYACA Five people murdered at Quebrada Tobacia, El Rodeo village,
Berbeo jurisdiction. Author:
GRUJUSBOY. 8/8 SANTANDER Six people murdered in Bucaramanga.
Author: LOS
GRILLOS. 8/16 CESAR
Five people killed in Las Cubres village, Estados Unidos
district, Becerril jurisdiction.
Author: LOS TESOS. 8/18 ANTIOQUIA Seven people killed, five indigents among them, in Segovia. Author: MUERTE A
REVOLUCIONARIOS DEL NORDESTE. 9/5 ANTIOQUIA Seven people killed in the San Javier district of Medellín. Author: LOS
PRISCOS. 9/11 MAGDALENA Four people murdered in San Pedro de la Sierra jurisdiction.
Author: M-1. 9/14 META Murder of CARLOS JULIAN VELEZ RODRIGUEZ, Unión Patriótica
Deputy; his wife MARIA NORMA GARZON MOYA; his son LUIS CARLOS BELLO
GARZON, and his brother DIMAS ELKIN VELEZ RODRIGUEZ, a leader in that
political movement. This occurred in the village of Las Brisas,
Mesetas jurisdiction. Author:
FRENTE REVOLUCIONARIO CAMPESINO. 9/15 CASANARE Five people murdered in Puerto Galtán jurisdiction.
They had been abducted that same day from the La Esperanza farm
in the village of Limonar, La Pollata Inspection, Tauramena
municipality. Author:
MOVIMIENTO DE DEFENSA CASNAREÑA. 9/30 ANTIOQUIA Murder of JOSE GUILLERMO YEPEZ GUTIERREZ, union leader at the
Frontino Gold Mines company. Also
murdered at the same time were EUCLIDES TAPARCUA, JORGE ALIRIO RIOS
MARIN, JUAN MARIO JIMENEZ, RAMIRO DE JESUS AGUDELO RAMIREZ, JOHN JAIRO
CEBALLOS and an unidentified person, in Segovia.
Author: MUERTE A
REVOLUCIONARIOS DEL NORDESTE. 10/28 ANTIOQUIA The bodies of GABRIEL ANTONIO ZAPATA VELASQUEZ, JOVEL ANTONIO
OBANDO, WILLIAM CARDONA and HUMBERTO DE JESUS YEPEZ MARQUEZ were
discovered (the first two in Medellín and the others in Girardota).
They had been kidnapped in Medellín on October 20, 1991.
Author: LOS
PLASMAS. 11/5 BOLIVAR Murder of EPL members NORBERTO SANCHEZ ARGUMERO, ROSIRIS
MARTINEZ NAVARRO, INGRI MARTINEZ NAVARRO and ISIDRO ANTONIO MARTINEZ
PASTRANA, chief of finance of the Francisco Martínez Narváez Front
of the EPL, in Cartagena. Author:
AMIGOS DE COLOMBIA. 11/6 VALLE CARLOS ARTURO ORTEGA MARTINEZ, MARCO ANTONIO HENAO OSORIO,
DAGOBERTO GONZALEZ CASTAÑEDA, LUZ EDY MURILLO TABARES and two
unidentified persons, in Florida.
Author: MOVIMIENTO
CIVICO REVOLUCIONARIO. 11/21 SANTANDER The bodies of RODOLFO GOMEZ RODRIGUEZ and three unidentified
persons were discovered in Matanza jurisdiction; later, authorities
removed the bodies of MARCO OCHOA, ISRAEL BLANCO and an
unidentified person at the place known as El Reposo, Matajira village
in that municipality. Author:
LOS GRILLOS. 11/21 RISARALDA Murder of LEONARDO GARCIA and three other persons by the last
name of ROJAS PEÑA, on the Calidades ranch, Santuario jurisdiction.
Author: BANDA DE
OLMEDO. 11/22 MAGDALENA Murder of PEDRO JULIAN POLO FLOREZ, NERFER FRANCISCO LOPEZ
SIERRA and two unidentified persons in Ciénaga.
Author: LOS
CHAMIZOS. 11/23 CUNDINAMARCA Murder of DIANA PATRICIA MUNAR SUAREZ, JOHN SOTELO CIFUENTES,
and three unidentified persons, in Bogota.
Author: AUTODEFENSA USME. 11/25 BOYACA Murder of LUIS EFREN MORA MORA, JORGE ALIRIO LAGOS LAGOS and
RAUL and JULIAN RODRIGUEZ PINEDA, in Pesca.
Author: AUTODEFENSAS
CAMPESINAS DEL MAGDALENA MEDIO. 11/23 CUNDINAMARCA Murder of VICTOR MANUEL RAMIREZ CAMACHO and GABRIEL ANTONIO
MATIZ ORDOÑEZ, in the village of Maripí, Villeta jurisdiction.
Later, the bodies of HUMBERTO RAMIREZ ESCOBAR and LUIS ALBERTO RAMIREZ
CAMACHO were found on the El Rozo farm in Villeta jurisdiction.
They had been tortured. Author:
AUTODEFENSA LOS CACHACOS. 11/28 MAGDALENA Murder of HERNAN REQUEME VEGA, a leader in the Unión Patriótica;
JAVIER ANTONIO MARTINEZ URIBE, a leader of Sintagro; SANTANDER SEGUNDO
SARMIENTO SANCHEZ, JUAN SEGUNDO PACHECO DEL VALLE and AMARIUS SANJUMA
GUERRERO were killed at Cerro Azul, on the Ciénaga-Fundación road.
Author: LOS
CHAMIZOS. 12/1 CORDOBA Murder of MILES CRISTINA VILLADIEGO, FREDY MIGUEL VILLADIEGO,
ALVARO JOSE TORRES SALCEDO and another unidentified person, in the
Santafé district, Chinú jurisdiction.
Author: ALFA 83. 12/2 ANTIOQUIA Murder of OLIVERIO MUÑOZ MONSALVE, his wife LUCELY ZAPATA,
their children CESAR DE JESUS, ALBA LUCIA, DORELIS EDITH, HUMBERTO,
ARGILIO and DARIO MARIO MUÑOZ ZAPATA, as well as ANTONIO JOSE and
MARIA LUISA MONSALVE, on the La Casita ranch, located at Los
Arrayanes, village of Alto Seco, San Andrés de Cuerquia jurisdiction.
Author: MUERTE A
REVOLUCIONARIOS DEL NORDESTE. 12/10 CUNDINAMARCA Murder of GILMA CAICEDO, ANGELA YADIRA VILLARAL LOPEZ, HUGO
VEGA RODRIGUEZ and DIEGO FERNANDEZ CIFUENTES, in Bogota.
Author: AUTODEFENSA
USME. 12/12 RISARALDA Murder of LILIANA and HELENA RIOS BLANDON (sisters) and
MAURICIO ALBERTO PUERTAS GRAJALES, JULIO CESAR SALAZAR GRAJALES and
RAMIRO EDUARDO ROJAS, at the place known as El Túnel on the Quinchía-Puerto
Rico road. Author: LOS
MAGNIFICOS. 12/16 CAUCA Murder of twenty indigenous people in the Páez community. Among them were four children, four women and four old
people. The scene of the
events was the place known as El Tablón on the Nilo hacienda, Caloto
jurisdiction. They also
burned ten homes. In the
investigation, the Public Order Judge handling the case ordered the
arrest of five persons. 12/20 CUNDINAMARCA Four unidentified persons were murdered on the Usme-Bogota
road. Author: AUTODEFENSA
USME. 12/20 SANTANDER Murder of ALIRIO RETAMOZO PELAEZ, MARTIN DIAS ARIAS, ABEL
ANTONIO MANZANAO VARGAS, LUIS ENRIQUE MANZANO VARGAS and ISMAEL PALAEZ
DIAZ, at the place known as Boca Caño, El Llanito district,
Barrancabermeja jurisdiction. Author:
AUTODEFENSAS CAMPESINOS DEL MAGDALENA MEDIO. 12/28 VALLE Murder of the brothers DIOMEDES and ULISES ANDRADE LEYTON,
ISRAEL MORALES VALENCIA and JOSE BELALCAZAR in Palmira.
Author: BANDA DEL
NORTE DEL VALLE.
MASSACRES RECORDED BETWEEN JANUARY AND APRIL 1992 1/1 RISARALDA Murder of four persons: FERNANDO
ISAZA GALLEGO, JUSTO PASTOR PORRAS ARCILA, DIDIER ISAZA ZAPATA, DIEGO
MAURICIO FRANCO ALVAREZ, at La Celia, inside the Las Cabañas bar. Author: unknown. 1/2 VALLE Four persons murdered: JAIR
GARCIA LOPEZ, MARIA DEL CARMEN PEÑA, JIMY GARCIA, JOSE ALBERTO GARCIA
LOPEZ, in Naranjal district on the La Esperanza farm.
Author: Unknown. 1/2 VALLE Four persons murdered: DUMAR
HENAO MEZA, OLIMPO GARCIA AYALA, LUIS ALFONSO BOLAÑOS VARELA, DIEGO
RENGIFO BEJARANO, in Cali, at the intersection of Avenida 6 and Calle
24. Author: unknown. 1/2 CALDAS Four people killed: JOHN
JAIRO MEJIA GOMEZ, NELSON MEJIA GOMEZ, HERNAN BALLEN OSORIO, MARIO
ROSMIRA PUERTA MOLINA. Wounded:
ALONSO SANCHEZ ZAPATA, in La Dorada. Author: unknown. 1/3 GUAJIRA Four persons murdered: JORGE
OCHOA NEGRETE, ELKIS OCHOA NEGRETE and two unidentified persons, in
Riohacha, Tomarrazón district. Author:
unknown.
1/5 ATLANTICO Five persons murdered: GEOVANY
RAFAEL NIEBLES OLIVARES, SERGIO ANTONIO NIEBLES OLIVARES, ANGELA MARIA
CHARRIS BARRIOS, FREDY ROLONGA SANDOVAL, and another unidentified
person, in Barranquilla, Villa Estadio district.
Author: unknown. 1/6 GUAJIRA Four persons murdered: CATALINO
FONTALVO CORPAS, BALTASAR VILLEGAS CASTILLO, MARTIN FONTALVO VILLEGAS,
GEOVANNY FONTALVO VILLEGAS, in Maicao, Carrapia district.
Author: BAND OF
HIRED KILLERS. 1/6 ANTIOQUIA Five persons murdered: MIGUEL
VELASQUEZ CAVIARES, GIOVANNY ZAPATA TABORDA, JOHN JAVIER CASTAÑEDA
VELEZ, JOAQUIN EMILIO VELEZ PUERTA, HUMBERTO DE JESUS VELEZ PUERTA.
Wounded: CARLOS
ALBERTO VALLEJO RAMIREZ in Bello, Maruchenga district.
Author: POPULAR
MILITIA. 1/24 SANTANDER Five people murdered: CARLOS
ALBERTO ALVAREZ AHUMADA, GUSTAVO ROJAS ORTIZ, HUMBERTO ATENCIA
CANCHILA, JOSE DOLORES SILVA QUIÑONES, PABLO EMILIO PINTO FRANCO.
Wounded: EDISON
SILVA BADILLO, LUIS ALFONSO ACUÑA CONEZ, LUIS JOSE ARIZA SANTANA,
DANIEL NEIRA ARENAS, Barrancabermeja, Esperanza district.
Author: BAND OF
HIRED KILLERS. 1/29 CAQUETA Five people murdered: JOSE
VERENELDO FERNANDEZ, GILDARO SANCHEZ PEÑA, GUILLERMO DUSSAN GRANJA,
RICARDO MATALLANA, and one unidentified person, in Solano.
Author: FARC. 2/7 ANTIOQUIA Four people killed: CARMEN
ROSA BERRIO ARBOLEDA, DORIS CARDONA ARBOLEDA, RUBEN DARIO CARDONA,
ALBA JANETH COPELAN DAVID. Wounded:
JESUS MARIA BERRIO, JESUS ANTONIO BERRIO SEPULVEDA, MATILDE
ARBOLEDA VALLEJO, at Highway 70, Street 98, in the Castilla
neighborhood of Medellín. Author:
POPULAR MILITIA. 2/9 SANTANDER Five people killed: JOSE
DOMINGO AMAYA PARRA (Vice President of the San Silvestre Transport
Union), JAIME CACERES NUÑEZ, PABLO NARVAEL, NUBIA LOZANO DE NARVAEL,
EDUVIGES LOPEZ RUIZ. Wounded:
LUIS GUILLERMO NIÑO BERMEO, ANA DE JESUS DURAN, MARIA DEL
CARMEN FONCE ARCINIEGAS, MARIA VIAZ VALETA, on a soccer field in
Barrancabermeja. Author:
unknown. 2/10 CASANARE Four people killed: LUIS
ALBERTO LOPEZ JARA, YOLIMA LOPEZ CHAVITA, ZORAIDA LOPEZ CHAVITA, JORGE
CESAR LOPEZ CHAVITA. Wounded:
EMILSE CHAVITA GUANARO, LUIS ALBERTO LOPEZ CHAVITA, EYER
ALBERTO LOPEZ CHAVITA, in Yopal, Flor Amarilla ranch.
Author: unknown. 2/15 SANTANDER Murder of nine people: EDUARDO
MOSQUERA CUBIDES, EMILIO GARCIA PARDO, ROSA ISABEL AGUILAR, ROSEVELT
LUENGAS, EDUARDO NIÑO NAVARRO, MERY GARCIA PARDO, LIBARDO GARCIA
PARDO, ANGEL MARIA PARDO, KENNEDY CASTRO,
Cimitarra, the village of La Piedra.
Author: BAND OF
HIRED KILLERS 2/16 META Four people killed: JOSE
MARTIN CORTES BEJARANO, JOSE YESID CORTES REYES, FERNANDO CORTES
REYES, CESAR AUGUSTO CORTES REYES.
Cubarral, village of La Central.
Author: FARC. 2/16 ANTIOQUIA Murder of four persons: FRANCISCO
ANTONIO DAVID VARGAS, JOHN JAIRO VANEGAS LONDOÑO, ALEXANDER DE JESUS
SALDARRIAGA, GABRIEL JAIME MARIN ZAPATA.
Wounded: ISRAEL
ANTONIO HENAO MARIN, HUMBERTO DE JESUS TABORDA TABORDA, ECHAVARRIA
ECHAVARRIA LUZ MERY, WILMAR EDISON ROJAS, in the Marichuela district
of Bello. Author:
BAND OF HIRED KILLERS. 2/16 META Four unidentified persons murdered in Cumaral, San Nicolás
Inspection. Author:
Unknown. 2/17 NARIÑO Six persons murdered: ABELARDO
WANGA PAY, OLGA PAY, FLORENCIA WANGA PAY, ARMANDO WANGA PAY, ARTURO
WANGA PAY, ORLANDO WANGA PAY, in Tumaco, village of Suarazanga,
Llorente district. Author:
unknown. 2/26 ANTIOQUIA Four persons murdered: SIGIFREDO
HERRERA TABORDA, HUGO ALEXANDER CASTRILLON GARCIA, HENRY DE JESUS
TABORDA VERA, JORGE IVAN TABORDA VERA, after being abducted from the
Versalles No. 2, Avenue 27, Street 68, Medellín.
Author: BAND OF
HIRED KILLERS. 2/27 CAUCA Four persons murdered: LEONARDO
MOLINA, ARTURO LASSO OJEDA, MARINO LOPEZ, NEVAR LOPEZ ALVAREZ, in
Rosas, at Quilace. Author:
unknown. 3/3 CASANARE Five persons murdered: LUIS
MARIA MORENO CHAQUEA, EUMELIA BRITO OROPEZA, JAMID MORENO BRITO, ELMER
MORENO BRITO, YAMILE MORENO BRITO.
Wounded: DUMAR
MORENO BRITO. On the Los
Bejucos ranch in the municipality of Trinidad.
Author: BAND OF
HIRED KILLERS. 3/22 VALLE Three people murdered: LIBARDO
DE JESUS VILLADA (Police Inspector), ANTONIO MARIA BEDOYA, HERNANDO
RODRIGO GALLEGO, ALEXANDER BEDOYA HERNANDEZ, in the village of
Tochecita-Tuluá. Author:
XXX CUADRILLA FARC. 3/31 CORDOBA Five people murdered: WALBERTO
ANTONIO PACHECO, NERYS DE LOS REYES NOLASCO LUCAS, MISAEL ANTONIO
PACHECO NOLASCO, JOHN JADER PACHECO NOLASCO, JULIO TIBALDO TRUJILLO
HUMANEZ, in the San Antonio district of Sahagún.
Author: unknown. 4/2 ANTIOQUIA Four people murdered: LISANDRO
OSPINA PIEDRAHITA, JOSE SALOMON CARDONA LOAIZA, JESUS ANTONIO CARDONA
LOAIZA, CARLOS ANTONIO CARDONA LOAIZA, in the village of El Canelito,
Cañasgordas. Author: unknown. MASSACRES BETWEEN 1988 AND 1991 1988
70 1989
67 1990
69 1991
63 TOTAL
269 [6]
According to information recently supplied by the Colombian
Government, the number of massacres in Colombia in 1991 was higher;
it was 79, not 63.[7]
c)
Acts of genocide
On December 9, 1948, the United Nations General Assembly
approved, via Resolution 260 A (III), the Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide, of which the Republic of Colombia is a party.
It entered into force on January 12, 1951.
The international crime of genocide is defined in Article II of
the Convention as any act committed with the intent to destroy, in
whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.
It is not the purpose of this section to accuse the Colombian
Government of the acts of genocide described in this report.
However, some reference must be made to the responsibility it
bears by virtue of the foregoing:
1.
Failure to honor the provisions of the American Convention that
make it incumbent upon the States parties to respect the rights and
freedoms recognized therein and to ensure to all persons subject to
their jurisdiction the free and full exercise thereof; (Article 1 in
relation to articles 4, 5 and 7, the rights to life, to humane
treatment and to personal liberty);
2.
Failure to properly investigate the systematic killing that
constitutes genocide, with the result that the material or
intellectual authors of the crimes have never been formally
identified; and
3.
Failure to punish the guilty, who enjoy absolute impunity
(Article 8, the right to a fair trial).
Moreover, because of these circumstances, the Colombian
Government is also responsible for the fact that the innocent
next-of-kin of the victims have been left unprotected and defenseless;
they have not been awarded any kind of compensatory damages, except in
the case of the family of the mayor of Sabana de Torres and the family
of his bodyguard. (Case 10473). The case of the Unión Patriótica:
Even though it is not the only serious case of genocide in
Colombia, the Commission believes that the massive and systematic
assassinations of the political group known as the Unión Patriótica,
is undoubtedly the worst of all for the reasons explained below.
As a legal political organization, the Unión Patriótica (UP)
was created on May 28, 1985. It
was the direct byproduct of the peace negotiations between the
National Secretary of the FARC and EP guerrilla groups and the
Government of President Belisario Betancur Cuartas (1982-1986).
However, the UP was not conceived as a political party in the
strict sense of the term, but more as a movement that would serve as a
vehicle for and give structure to the various manifestations of civic
and popular protest and thus become a political alternative capable of
changing the narrow rules of political play in the country, of
achieving what was known as the democratic opening.
While the Unión Patriótica was the political vehicle of
guerrillas in transition to possible reassimilation into civilian
life, it also had obvious election prospects; in other words, as the
protest was being organized, the leaders of the protest were promoting
themselves as candidates for the 1986 elections that would choose the
new members of the municipal governments, departmental assemblies and
the National Congress. It
was this that enabled the UP's voter
alliances to win 9 seats and 3 alternate seats in Congress, 10 seats
and 4 alternate seats in departmental assemblies and 350 seats on town
councils in the March 1986 elections.
In May of that year, Jaime Pardo Leal, a former magistrate and
university professor, won 320,000 votes as UP's presidential
candidate. Initially the
liberal government of Virgilio Barco acknowledged the UP's majority in
various municipalities and therefore appointed 14 UP mayors.
In the March 1988 elections, the UP elected 18 mayors, 13
deputies and 5 alternates, and was able to keep the municipal-council
seats it had won two years earlier.
The UP thus became a figure in the political picture from 1985
to 1988; it was a political and social force that pulled the Colombian
left, which had always been politically peripheral, back into the
mainstream; while it is no real threat to the traditional hold that
the liberal and conservative parties have had on the State's direction
and administration, it is one of the most important organizations in
terms of mobilizing the masses.
In its first five years of existence (1985-1989), the violence
against it was selective and relatively confined to those regions
where it had greater political and electoral success.
The incidence of violence was highest in election years: 1986 saw 159 cases, and 1988 saw 212 cases.
The departments with the highest level of violence were
Antioquia with 140 cases, Meta with 112 cases, and Santander with 91.
Not coincidentally, these were the very regions where the UP
had the best showings in the 1986 and 1988 elections.
Finally, the most frequent targets were political and union
leaders: 193 and 120
cases, respectively. The
most common type of violence was murder, which accounted for 614
cases, in other words, 83.20% of the total number of victims on record
as of December 31, 1989.
Among leaders elected to governing bodies in 1986 and 1988, the
following were victims of violence: 2 senators, 3 representatives to
the house, 6 departmental deputies, 89 town councilmen, 2 former
councilmen, 9 mayors, 1 former mayor, 3 candidates for town council
and 3 candidates for mayor.
These represent 16% of the UP victims during that same period.
According to a number of human rights organizations, agents of
the state (military forces, police forces and the DAS) are among the
alleged authors of this violence, although paramilitary groups account
for the largest share of the violence against the UP, at 73.84% (544
cases). Hired gunmen, individuals associated with the underworld and
repeatedly used for political violence are involved in 155 cases
(21%).
Although complete data are not available and what is available
is not broken down, between January 1990 and June 1992 there were 292
cases of human rights violations, especially extrajudicial executions. In the 1990 election year, the UP, already seriously
diminished, was again the target of political violence, with a total
of 90 cases. Between
January 1 and March 1990, in Antioquia--especially in the Urabá
region--and Meta, there were no less than six massacres of three or
more members. On March
22, Bernardo Jaramillo Ossa, UP party chairman and presidential
candidate, was assassinated. With
that crime, the violence against the UP momentarily came to a halt
because the assassination prompted the national UP leadership to
refrain from participating in the presidential election of May of that
year. The UP, which came into existence to open up political and
electoral participation, temporarily withdrew from the political
arena.
The elections for the National Constitutional Assembly, held on
December 9, 1990, did not seem to be the occasion of violence; but in
the second half of 1991 and March 1992, which were also election times
(for a new Congress, departmental assemblies, and municipal
councilmen, respectively), violence increased again.[8]
It is obvious that it is not just participation in elections
that triggers violence against the UP.
There are long-standing hatreds and political intolerance in
regions like Meta and Magdalena Medio.
Perhaps the somewhat ambiguous position of the political
leadership of the UP and of the Colombian Communist Party vis-a-vis
war and peace in the country fuels the continual violence against its
members and leaders, as they continue to pay the consequences of an
armed conflict being needlessly prolonged.
Cases of genocide in the form of "social
cleansing"
The violence perpetrated on the pretense of "social
cleansing" in Colombia takes its victims among prostitutes,
street children, beggars, homosexuals, common criminals, drug addicts,
vagrants, alcoholics, and other individuals considered to be on the
fringes of society. All
these people are seen to have something in common, something that
certain organized groups use as a pretext to practice their racist,
fascist or neo-nazi violence. In
one form or another, these groups have managed to organize themselves
so that they are now operating throughout the country, performing what
they regard as their mission of purging society.
They see themselves as "cleansing" society of what
they regard as human filth that soils society, constitutes a burden on
society, and a blot on society that must be erased.
Murders of this type became quite widespread in the major
cities of the country. In
fact, they have become one of the most critical problems in recent
years. According to the
news bulletin of the Interdenominational Commission for Justice and
Peace, 273 persons were killed in 1983, 364 were killed in 1989, 267
were killed in 1990, 389 were killed in 1991, and between January and
September of 1992, there were 420 such killings.
The bishop of Pereira, Monsignor Darío Castrillón, stated
that in that city alone, 60 indigents were murdered in just 20 days
between the months of July and August of 1991.
(La Prensa, July 17, 1991, p.12).
This complaint triggered a joint investigation by the Office of
the Attorney General and the National Police, which resulted in the
dismissal of 13 agents and 2 patrolmen attached to the Pereira Police
Command (El Tiempo, November 23, 1991, p. 5B).
The record of Criminal Investigations of the Department of
Caldas shows that one death squad murdered 325 "desechables"
(undesirables, throw-aways) in Manizales in the first half of the year
(El Tiempo, July 16, 1991, p. 1E).
Social cleansing in Colombia has taken on truly alarming
proportions. According to
the United Nations Rapporteur on Arbitrary Executions in Colombia, Mr.
Amos Wako, "social cleansing" murders account for nearly 10%
of the total number of deaths in the country.
"Social cleansing" is, for the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights, one of the most heinous crimes committed,
especially because its victims are so often helpless children, women,
and people without any means of defense, nonaggressive types who pose
no threat to society. This type of social eradication
is a vile and inhuman act.
One particularly gruesome crime that was more than just
"social cleansing" and that demonstrates how vulnerable the
right to life is, happened at the amphitheater of the Universidad
Libre, Barranquilla Campus. In
March 1992 the bodies of 11 people were found.
They had been bludgeoned to death and then shot once in the
head. Also found were several buckets of blood and human organs.
All this was learned thanks to the testimony of Oscar Hernández,
a trash picker who managed to save his life in a horrible episode that
took place inside university facilities on February 29, 1992.
The eleven bodies were those of individuals who had disappeared
in recent days. Most were
trash pickers or prostitutes. The
bodies were to be used by the medical students and the organs were
going to be sold. The
criminal investigations conducted uncovered some alarming facts:
this had been going on for at least two years; 8 of the victims
died from cranial-encephalic trauma and had been killed somewhere
between ten and twelve days earlier; four of the bullets found had
been fired by the guard's weapon; the wounds of two trash pickers who
managed to survive were from the same weapons used to murder the other
eleven people; some of the human remains belonged to a bricklayer who
had disappeared in August 1990. His
body was being used in the medical school laboratories in 1991.
As of now, a number of university employees are under arrest
and the criminal investigation is implicating several officials,
former staff of the university and members of the police who provided
the bodies to the university, a fact being investigated by the
military criminal courts.[9]
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[6]
Human rights data bank of the Centro de Investigación y
Educación Popular (CINEP), in Mauricio García Durán De la
Uribe a Tlaxcala, procesos de paz, Bogota, CINEP, 1992, p. 282.
[7]
See table of massacres in 1993, attached to this report.
[8]
Guido Bonilla. "La violencia contra la Unión Patriótoca",
Centro de Estudios e Investigaciones Sociales, Bogota.
[9]
See Andean Commission of Jurists, Informative Andino, #65,
Lima, April 1992, p.2. |