The Press

Caught in the middle

Colombia is pitting two vulnerable groups against each other. At stake is the Amazon, report Samantha Schmidt and Diana Durán.

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Luis Eduardo Tijaro walked down the dirt path to the land where he had invested his life’s savings. He strolled past his cattle, grazing on bright green pasture; by the small wooden house with the papaya tree towering over his wife’s garden; and up to the creek where his 11-year-old son waded.

Their rural community, in Montebello, an isolated corner of the Amazon once controlled by Colombia’s largest rebel group, is at least two hours from the closest town. The family of four arrived here six years ago, on the back of a motorbike, carrying one suitcase.

Theirs was a uniquely Colombian story, a family hit by opposing sides of the country’s conflict: he had been forced from his home by government-backed paramilita­ries; she had been displaced by rebel fighters. But when they moved here, the country was on the cusp of peace.

They found a patch of nearly 75 hectares of cheap, rich soil in the Montebello community. They built a home, a farm, a fresh start.

The family had no idea the land was part of a protected reservatio­n for an indigenous community displaced by guerrillas a decade earlier. A community that objected to the farmers’ practice of clearing the rainforest for cattle and crops.

After the rebel Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) left the jungle and signed a peace deal with the government, indigenous families launched a legal fight to protect their land.

Now Tijaro and his family fear they will be forced to leave their home yet again. ‘‘We’d have to start over from zero,’’ he says.

Half a decade after Colombia’s historic peace accords, an essential source of stability – land – continues to drive conflict here.

The country’s long-running failure to define who owns what land, and to record the limits of protected areas, has left an opening for desperate farmers such as Tijaro to buy property they’re not supposed to own.

In the peace deal, signed five years ago, the government agreed to distribute land titles, in part to prevent such disputes. But delays in fulfilling that promise are pitting vulnerable population­s against each other.

‘‘It’s not up to us or the farmers to resolve this conflict. It is up to the state,’’ said Alexander Bocanegra, an indigenous leader here. ‘‘If not, our territory will be wasted. And if we return, people could die.’’

Restoring land

Land lies at the core of conflict in Colombia. The South American nation has one of the most unequal distributi­ons of land in the world. The top 1 per cent of landowners own nearly 43 per cent of rural land. The small-holding farmers, who produce half of the food consumed in Colombia, own just 4.8 per cent of productive land.

About half of rural parcels in Colombia lack a title, making it difficult for farmers to access loans, invest in land, pass property on to their children or defend territory stolen by armed groups.

Land was a key reason the Farc took up arms in the 1960s, igniting the 52-year civil war. And yet the conflict only made matters worse: about 6.5 million hectares were stolen by armed groups on all sides. Millions of families were forced off their land, creating one of the largest internally displaced population­s in the world.

The first point in the accords focuses on land: formalisin­g titles for 7m hectares, creating a fund

for landless farmers and setting up a registry to record the ownership and use of all property.

‘‘This would take care of many of the problems we have had for decades in the rural areas,’’ said Juan Manuel Santos, president of Colombia during the peace negotiatio­ns. ‘‘It was the easiest and the fastest point in the agenda that we agreed upon with the Farc.’’

But it’s been one of the slowest for the government to implement.

President Ivan Duque said his administra­tion has demonstrat­ed a ‘‘clear commitment’’ to land reform. In an interview with The Washington Post, he said he aimed to register 50,000 land titles by December, and had created a road map to update records for

50 per cent of Colombia’s land, the ‘‘essence of any rural reforms’’.

But critics doubt he will reach those goals, and say his administra­tion has exaggerate­d its progress. As of August, only 15 per cent of the national territory had been included in the land registry, according to the Kroc Institute at the University of Notre Dame, an official monitor of the peace accord implementa­tion. The peace deal called for the creation of a special agrarian jurisdicti­on to resolve land conflicts, but congress has not approved the law to establish it.

The Duque administra­tion says it has put more than 1.2m hectares in the land fund. But only 2 per cent has been confirmed to be unoccupied, Colombia’s inspector general’s office reported in August.

The US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t has spent at least US$160m to support land formalisat­ion, delivering

11,000 titles so far. Meanwhile, violence has continued to grow. Farc dissident groups, led by rebels who have rejected the peace deal, and paramilita­ry groups are terrorisin­g and displacing communitie­s. From January to July, internal displaceme­nt rose by 167 per cent over the same

period a year earlier, according to UN monitors. More than 400,000 people have been displaced since the accords were signed.

When Tijaro purchased the land from a relative of his wife, he was told the property was outside the indigenous reservatio­n, the Llanos del Yarı Yaguara II. He signed a contract, but was given no land title.

Now he is hearing rumours the government could force farmers like him to leave. ‘‘Where would we go?’’ asks his wife, Yorledi.

‘The false peace’

Hundreds of kilometres away in Bogota, Efren Bocanegra looks out the window of his cramped apartment at the next building over. He hears the sounds of traffic, music blasting next door, a man with a megaphone selling corn.

His family returned to this brick complex in August, after leaving the Yaguara II reservatio­n in the wake of what Bocanegra describes as ‘‘la paz falsa’’, the false peace.

The 56-year-old grandfathe­r was 8 when his family settled in the untouched land as part of a group of indigenous colonisers displaced from other parts of the country.

In 1995, the Colombian government declared the area of about 150,000 hectares a protected indigenous reservatio­n. It’s believed to be the only case of indigenous colonisati­on formalised by the Colombian state.

But Colombia was also in the middle of its bloody internal conflict. Bocanegra was 15 when his father, a community leader, disappeare­d. Then, in 2004, a different Bocanegra leader also went missing. The family believe both men were killed by the Farc, whose members warned Bocanegra’s extended family to leave within 48 hours, or be killed.

Efren and his family arrived in Bogota with no money and no experience of urban life. They went from growing all their food to paying rent and water bills for the first time. They lived on leftovers from the city’s largest market until Bocanegra found work as a high school janitor.

The government eventually provided them with a house in a residentia­l complex for victims of the conflict. But after the peace deal, they filed a lawsuit demanding the state guarantee their safe return to their land.

A judge ordered the government to define the reservatio­n’s borders, to protect it from armed criminal groups and to work with the military to eradicate illegal crops in the area.

The judge also pointed out the ‘‘dramatic’’ increase in deforestat­ion, driven by cattle ranching, and ordered government agencies to come up with a strategy to stop it.

But as four years passed, farmers continued to move into the reservatio­n, the trees continued to fall and new criminal groups – Farc dissidents – began to gain control.

The indigenous families that had returned to the reservatio­n, led by Bocanegra’s son, Alexander, and sister, Yerley, pleaded with local farmer leaders and the government to stop the deforestat­ion. When that didn’t work, they asked for a meeting with the people who had the most authority in the region: the Farc dissidents.

‘‘Who gave you permission to come back?’’ asked the local commander, known by the alias Cipriano Gonza´ lez. He accused the Bocanegras of being informants for the Colombian military.

Then, in August, a messenger delivered orders: the Bocanegras would have to stop working with the government to preserve their land. It was clear to the family that they would have to leave.

They returned to Bogota. The next day, news broke: the army had killed Gonzalez. Word spread that his brothers blamed the Bocanegras and wanted revenge.

The Bocanegras didn’t know when it would be safe to return.

‘‘It’s a complete abandonmen­t by the state toward the farmers, toward the indigenous,’’ Yerley Bocanegra says. ‘‘It’s a war without end.’’

No alternativ­es

For years, the farmers in the Montebello community lived in harmony with their indigenous neighbours, the few families who remained on the reservatio­n. They played soccer in the field by the community store, across from the Pentecosta­l church. Their children attended the same school.

In 2017, everything changed. That was the year government officials started showing up to take measuremen­ts outside the Yaguara II reservatio­n. When they started telling farmers their properties were on the protected land.

It was a debate about invisible lines, borders never made clear to the farmers or the indigenous families. Caught in the middle were about 90 families, most of them farmers, many of whom arrived in the last five years.

Fanny Barreto, who lives with the indigenous community in the Yaguara II reservatio­n, didn’t want the farmers to have to leave their homes. But she wanted them to stop clearing the trees.

After farmers failed to heed repeated warnings to stop deforestat­ion, local indigenous leaders confiscate­d their chain saws. But that led only to threats. One farmer said if the indigenous families tried to kick him out of his home, someone would end up dead.

The indigenous families and the government say they have no plans to forcibly remove the farmers. But the farmers’ fears have a basis. The Duque administra­tion has militarise­d the fight against deforestat­ion through a strategy called ‘‘Operation Artemisa’’. It has been accused of excessive force against small-holding farmers.

The farmers say they have no choice but to cut down trees. ‘‘The economy revolves around livestock here,’’ local leader Elver Ortiz tells Barreto as a group of farmers and indigenous families debate the issue in the community gathering space.

Other crops, such as plantains and yucca, would require fewer hectares of deforestat­ion than cattle, and cause less harm to the environmen­t. But they’re not as profitable, Ortiz says, ‘‘because we don’t have roads’’.

If the government paved roads – another promise of the accords – Ortiz might be able to cover the costs of transporti­ng plantains to La Macarena, the closest town. But the only way to town now is a muddy trail that becomes nearly impassable when it rains. ‘‘Why cattle?’’ he says. ‘‘Because the cattle we can take by foot.’’

Tijaro sees livestock as his only option. It has allowed him to provide a comfortabl­e life for his children.

In his small wooden home, steps from the community gathering place, his youngest son rushes in, taking off his backpack. His mother asks about his homework.

The 7-year-old helps his mother feed the family’s baby chicks. He grabs one tightly: ‘‘This one is my favourite!’’

Tijaro watches through the window, looking out at his pasture, as his older son runs in circles in the falling rain.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A small indigenous village in the jungle in Colombia.
GETTY IMAGES A small indigenous village in the jungle in Colombia.
 ?? WASHINGTON POST ?? Efren Bocanegra and his family, who are part of the Pijao indigenous community, fled their land for Bogota after receiving death threats.
WASHINGTON POST Efren Bocanegra and his family, who are part of the Pijao indigenous community, fled their land for Bogota after receiving death threats.
 ?? FERNANDA PINEDA/ WASHINGTON POST ?? Breiner Tijaro, 11, waits for the rain to stop in Montebello, Colombia.
FERNANDA PINEDA/ WASHINGTON POST Breiner Tijaro, 11, waits for the rain to stop in Montebello, Colombia.

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