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UNHCR delivers emergency aid to indigenous people in Colombia

News Stories, 22 April 2008

© UNHCR/M.-H.Verney
A ferry laden with vital food aid for indigenous people on the Guaviare River.

PUERTO ALVIRA, Colombia, April 22 (UNHCR) The UN refugee agency has organized a humanitarian mission to bring emergency aid to indigenous communities living along southern-central Colombia's Guaviare River.

Fourteen tons of food provided by UNHCR's sister agency, the World Food Programme (WFP), were last week delivered by boat and distributed to some 1,000 people in the riverside villages of Mocuare, Puerto Alvira and Barranco Colorado and the municipal centre of Mapiripan. The area is disputed by rival irregular armed groups, while the Colombian armed forces are trying to regain control of the territory.

All four locations face an extremely difficult humanitarian situation, with critical food shortages. Meanwhile, there is a high risk of displacement for inhabitants of the three villages on the banks of the Guaviare.

"We've heard there's going to be more fighting and that it is going to be worse than we have seen so far," said a local woman met by UNHCR during a food distribution in one of the villages. "Who would not be scared to hear that?"

Two of her daughters had fled earlier this month with their husbands and children. She'd had no news from them since and said she was worried. The woman's relatives left by foot and headed into the forest after waiting days for a boat that never came.

Hundreds of people have fled the area since the start of the year. In the village of Barranco Colorado, only about 40 families (around 200 people) from two indigenous groups are left. Puerto Alvira has lost an estimated 75 percent of its estimated 3,000-strong population and people are also fleeing from Mocuare.

Those who remain are often the poorest and most vulnerable. They are now virtually cut off from the rest of the world. Hardly any food is getting through and what can be found is very expensive. A small bottle of water costs four times more than in Bogota, the national capital.

The government has an extremely limited presence in the area, while the local economy mainly focusing on fishing, hunting and bartering was destroyed when illegal armed groups introduced the cultivation of coca, which is processed into cocaine.

UNHCR staff taking part in last week's mission said local medical facilities and supplies were inadequate. They noted an acute shortage of medicine in all three villages and said there appeared to be no means available for evacuating the sick in an emergency.

"I have two very sick people," the only nurse left in Barranco Colorado said. "One of them has acute malaria and I worry that he might die but I don't have even an aspirin or clean water to give him."

The local Church, representatives of the ombudsman's office and staff from the Colombian Ministry for Social Welfare took part in the mission with UNHCR and the WFP. As well as food rations, the mission distributed basic hygiene kits and school materials donated by the local municipality.

Most of the beneficiaries belonged to the Guyabero and Nukak Maku tribes, while a few non-indigenous families identified as extremely vulnerable also received assistance. Both the Guyabero and the Nukak Maku are indigenous to the Guaviare region. Many have been forced to flee their lands as a result of the armed conflict, putting at risk their survival as unique ethnic groups.

Under Colombian and international law, special efforts must be made to protect such groups from the devastating impact of losing their lands. Last week's mission was part of a series of preventive protection measures being undertaken to this end.

"Prevention of forced displacement by helping people stay on their lands with support and assistance before they are forced to flee is often the most effective form of protection," explained Jean-Noël Wetterwald, UNHCR representative in Colombia.

He added that the intervention in Guaviare was a concrete example of how much can be achieved through inter-institutional cooperation with local communities. UNHCR and WFP, together with their local partners, are putting in place several projects to help the indigenous people along the Guaviare River, including a school restaurant in Puerto Alvira and welfare programmes for elderly people and infants.

Discussing these plans to help them, local people in Puerto Alvira said they were beginning to see light at the end of the tunnel. "Some families who left are beginning to think it may be possible to come back, now that we are no longer so alone and forgotten," one man said.

There are 80 different indigenous groups in Colombia, who together make up 2 percent of the country's population. They have been forced to flee their homes in even greater percentages than the rest of their compatriots. At the end of 2007, some 2.4 million Colombians were registered with the government as victims of forced internal displacement.

By Marie-Hélène Verney in Puerto Alvira, Colombia

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UNHCR country pages

Emergency Response

UNHCR is committed to increasing its ability to respond to complex emergency situations.

Indigenous people in Colombia

There are about a million indigenous people in Colombia. They belong to 80 different groups and make up one of the world's most diverse indigenous heritages. But the internal armed conflict is taking its toll on them.

Like many Colombians, indigenous people often have no choice but to flee their lands to escape violence. Forced displacement is especially tragic for them because they have extremely strong links to their ancestral lands. Often their economic, social and cultural survival depends on keeping these links alive.

According to Colombia's national indigenous association ONIC, 18 of the smaller groups are at risk of disappearing. UNHCR is working with them to support their struggle to stay on their territories or to rebuild their lives when they are forced to flee.

UNHCR also assists indigenous refugees in neighbouring countries like Panama, Ecuador, Venezuela and Brazil. UNHCR is developing a regional strategy to better address the specific needs of indigenous people during exile.

Indigenous people in Colombia

Colombia: Life in the Barrios

After more than forty years of internal armed conflict, Colombia has one of the largest populations of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the world. Well over two million people have been forced to flee their homes; many of them have left remote rural areas to take refuge in the relative safety of the cities.

Displaced families often end up living in slum areas on the outskirts of the big cities, where they lack even the most basic services. Just outside Bogota, tens of thousands of displaced people live in the shantytowns of Altos de Cazuca and Altos de Florida, with little access to health, education or decent housing. Security is a problem too, with irregular armed groups and gangs controlling the shantytowns, often targeting young people.

UNHCR is working with the authorities in ten locations across Colombia to ensure that the rights of internally displaced people are fully respected – including the rights to basic services, health and education, as well as security.

Colombia: Life in the Barrios

Panama's Hidden Refugees

Colombia's armed conflict has forced millions of people to flee their homes, including hundreds of thousands who have sought refuge in other countries in the region.

Along the border with Colombia, Panama's Darien region is a thick and inhospitable jungle accessible only by boat. Yet many Colombians have taken refuge here after fleeing the irregular armed groups who control large parts of jungle territory on the other side of the border.

Many of the families sheltering in the Darien are from Colombia's ethnic minorities – indigenous or Afro-Colombians – who have been particularly badly hit by the conflict and forcibly displaced in large numbers. In recent years, there has also been an increase in the numbers of Colombians arriving in the capital, Panama City.

There are an estimated 12,500 Colombians of concern to UNHCR in Panama, but many prefer not to make themselves known to authorities and remain in hiding. This "hidden population" is one of the biggest challenges facing UNHCR not only in Panama but also in Ecuador and Venezuela.

Panama's Hidden Refugees

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