Bangkok Post

Indigenous people march on Bogota to end conflict

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Thousands of indigenous Colombians arrived in the country’s capital on Sunday, demanding a meeting with President Ivan Duque and an end to growing violence in their territorie­s.

The demonstrat­ors are also asking that they be consulted on major developmen­t projects and for the full implementa­tion of a 2016 peace plan that ended a half century of insurgency by the rebel Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc).

“We demand guarantees for life, the right to land and that they comply with the peace agreements with the Farc rebels,” Hermes Pete, senior advisor to the Regional Indigenous Council of Cauca, told AFP.

Protests began on Oct 10 in southweste­rn Colombia and gradually advanced to the capital.

The approximat­ely 7,500 who travelled to Bogota demanded a faceto-face meeting with the president to discuss the rise in violence from guerrillas and other groups financed by drug traffickin­g.

But presidenti­al advisor Miguel Ceballos insisted that there was no possibilit­y of meeting with Mr Duque, instead offering a meeting with a federal delegation and the ombudsman — an offer protestors rejected.

Mr Ceballos also stressed his concerns about the risks of the pandemic, saying the government had distribute­d 1,000 Covid-19 tests among the demonstrat­ors.

But protest spokespers­on Noelia

Campo insisted the minga, or indigenous meeting, “does not come sick, the minga comes healthy,” and asked that the movement not be stigmatise­d.

Bogota mayor Claudia Lopez welcomed the protest movement and urged Mr Duque to listen to its demands.

The group were to yesterday march to the Plaza de Bolivar, next to the presidenti­al palace.

And tomorrow they will join the “national strike”, an anti-government movement that began in late 2019.

Mr Duque, a conservati­ve, has faced numerous protests during his two years in office, prompted by abuses by the armed forces, controvers­ial economic and education policies, and a marked increase in violence against human rights activists.

“We have come to tell the country to respect our lives, to respect our territory... because today the pandemic is not killing us, we are being killed by the murderous bullets and the spread of the different armed groups,” protest spokespers­on Mr Campo said.

Colombia’s southwest has a large indigenous population and has been one of the areas worst affected by a wave of violence that has resulted in at least 42 massacres this year, according to the United Nations.

 ?? AFP ?? Colombian indigenous people flutter a Colombian flag as they arrive in Bogota on a ‘chiva’ — a local transport vehicle — on Sunday to demand a meeting with President Ivan Duque.
AFP Colombian indigenous people flutter a Colombian flag as they arrive in Bogota on a ‘chiva’ — a local transport vehicle — on Sunday to demand a meeting with President Ivan Duque.

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