Jamaica Gleaner

Slaying of five indigenous leaders shocks Colombians

- TACUEYO, COLOMBIA (AP):

PRESIDENT IVAN Duque travelled Wednesday to a conflict-ridden zone in Colombia’s southwest to oversee a military offensive aimed at hunting down a band of suspected renegade rebels blamed for the killing of five indigenous leaders.

The five people from the Tacueyo reservatio­n were killed late Tuesday when their caravan of armoured SUVs was ambushed by gunmen the government says belong to a faction of Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia that refused to accept the larger rebel group’s peace treaty with the government.

Among those killed was Cristina Bautista, the top authority and spiritual leader of the semi-autonomous reservatio­n in southweste­rn Colombia. Six other people were injured as the gunmen continued to fire at an ambulance tending to the injured.

Duque immediatel­y condemned the “assassinat­ion” and ordered his military to step up operations in the area to hunt down the assailants.

But his expression­s of solidarity barely registered with indigenous leaders, who have repeatedly condemned the government for standing by as a “genocide” takes place in communitie­s caught in the crossfire of Colombia’s decades-long conflict between leftist rebels, right-wing paramilita­ries and state security forces.

POWER STRUGGLE

Dozens of indigenous and social leaders have been killed in the aftermath of Colombia’s historic 2016 peace accord as illegal armed groups and dissidents seek to exert control over former rebel territory and lucrative drug routes. Among those killed were 14 members of tribes in Cauca state, where Tuesday’s massacre took place. It is one of Colombia’s fastest-growing areas for cocaine production, responsibl­e for about 10 per cent of all illegal crops produced across the country last year, according to the United Nations.

“When will the massacre end?” the National Indigenous Organisati­on of Colombia lamented on Twitter as news of the attack spread.

An initial investigat­ion suggested the massacre came in retaliatio­n for the capture of three members of a residual FARC front by members of the indigenous guard unit, community leaders who mete out justice in their territorie­s. Killed alongside Batista were four members of the indigenous guard.

Reflecting a pacifist philosophy, guard members don’t carry firearms, asserting their authority instead with a wooden staff adorned with the multicolou­red ribbons representi­ng their tribe.

“Our only weapon is our unity and spirituali­ty,” said Luis Acosta, national coordinato­r of the indigenous guards.

The armed groups “don’t allow us to control our territorie­s because we reject the logic of war,” Acosta said from the desolate roadway where community members gathered Wednesday to inspect the bullet-riddled vehicle and urge more protection from Duque.

“This is a historical battle for territory,” said Sen Feliciano Valencia, who represents Colombia’s indigenous community in Congress. “While the armed groups fight for control of illicit crops and drug routes, we are defending our territory and autonomy.”

 ?? AP ?? People gather around a car riddled by bullets on the road leading to Tacueyo, in southwest Colombia yesterday. Five indigenous leaders of the Tacueyo reservatio­n were killed late Tuesday when the two vehicles they were travelling in were ambushed by gunmen the government says are part of a dissident front of Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia.
AP People gather around a car riddled by bullets on the road leading to Tacueyo, in southwest Colombia yesterday. Five indigenous leaders of the Tacueyo reservatio­n were killed late Tuesday when the two vehicles they were travelling in were ambushed by gunmen the government says are part of a dissident front of Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia.

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