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Colombia: 25,000 people confined for ten days under threat from armed groups

2024-02-01T21:49:49.295Z

Highlights: Around 25,000 people have been confined for ten days in the Colombian Amazon. Two rival armed groups are preventing people from leaving their homes. “We feel fear, anxiety. We cannot go out,” one resident told AFP. The two groups signed a peace deal in 2012, but have not yet come to an agreement on the future of the pact. The U.S. Embassy in Bogota says it is working with the Colombian government to find a solution to the problem.


Two rival armed groups, both dissidents of the FARC, prohibit the inhabitants of indigenous villages from traveling and block their supplies.


Around 25,000 people have been confined for ten days and risk running out of food in indigenous villages in the Colombian Amazon, due to threats from FARC dissidents, the local governor said on Thursday.

In the municipalities of Solano and Milan (south),

“a confrontation is imminent”

between the Central Staff (EMC) and the

“Segunda Marquetalia”

, indicated on national radio the governor of the Caqueta Department, Luis Francisco Ruiz.

Rival groups

These two rival armed groups are both dissidents of the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia), a Marxist guerrilla dismantled since the signing of a historic peace agreement signed in 2016 with this Marxist guerrilla.

With leaflets, as well as audio and videos broadcast on social networks, the rebels prohibit residents from moving.

“We feel fear, anguish, anxiety (...) We cannot sleep

,” a local community leader who preferred to remain anonymous told AFP by telephone.

“It is very dangerous to go out

. ”

Audio attributed to a suspected guerrilla leader has been circulating since last week.

“No one is allowed to walk along the river (...) For fear that innocent people fall into it (...) Everyone stay calm,”

warns this recording, of which the AFP has no information. could not verify the authenticity.

“There is a restriction of mobility on the Orteguaza and Caqueta rivers that mainly harms”

two indigenous communities located near the triple border between Colombia, Ecuador and Peru, explained Governor Ruiz.

“This concerns around 25,000 people, isolated by restrictions imposed on rivers in an area where the only access is currently by water

. ”

Over the last ten days, only

“two barges (...) with non-perishable foodstuffs”

have been able to enter this area.

For the rest, there is

“no commercial transport mobility”

, he lamented.

The governor joined the call launched Monday by indigenous organizations, who asked President Gustavo Petro

for “immediate solutions to the permanent encirclement, threats and attacks on the free movement of communities”

in the region .

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2024-02-01

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