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COLOMBIA: Jaime Garzón’s Murder; No Digging Allowed (Part 2)
By Constanza Vieira*
BOGOTÁ - It’s always the same: the TV audience is grief-stricken and indignant that he is no longer with us, but they continue to laugh along with him. Beloved Colombian comic Jaime Garzón was assassinated on Aug. 13, 1999, but he is still alive on the small screen.
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COLOMBIA: Spying in the Name of 'Democratic Security' (Part 1)
By Constanza Vieira*
BOGOTÁ - While the world's attention was riveted on the inauguration of U.S. President Barack Obama, an operation was surreptitiously being carried out Jan. 19-21 at the headquarters of Colombia’s domestic intelligence agency, the Departamento Administrativo de Seguridad (DAS), which answers directly to the president’s office.
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COLOMBIA: UN Confirms ‘Systematic’ Killings of Civilians by Soldiers
By Constanza Vieira
BOGOTA - Philip Alston, the U.N. rapporteur on extrajudicial executions, said this practice is "systematic" in Colombia. But he added that he did not have evidence that it was a state policy, as many victims and human rights defenders argue.
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COLOMBIA: All the President’s Spies
Analysis by Javier Darío Restrepo
BOGOTA - Colombian journalist Hollman Morris phoned an international news agency and said in an agitated voice: "I am being followed by the police."
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LABOUR: Colombia Still Undisputed Leader in Trade Unionist Murders
By Gustavo Capdevila
GENEVA - Colombia has long been the world leader in murders of trade unionists – a dubious distinction that it seems in no danger of losing, according to a new report by the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC).
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ENVIRONMENT-COLOMBIA: Coal Mine Hurts Highlands Lake, Farms
By Helda Martínez
SUESCA, Colombia - Protests by indigenous farmers in the Colombian village of Cuayá, 75 km north of Bogotá, have failed to bring to a halt the unregulated extraction of coal, which has had disastrous environmental effects on Lake Suesca, 3,000 metres above sea level.
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COLOMBIA: The Farmers Who Abandoned Coca for Cocoa
By Constanza Vieira*
FLORENCIA, Colombia - Chocaguán Amazónico, a small peasant-run alternative crop company that emerged in the midst of Colombia's cocaine boom and civil war, will celebrate its 15th birthday in September.
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RIGHTS: Historic Court Under the Spotlight in New Film
By Joy Wiltermuth
NEW YORK - The International Criminal Court has struggled since its inception to realise its core mandate to prosecute the world’s worst human rights offenders, putting on trial propagators of genocide, war crimes and the inductors of child soldiers into civil conflict.
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COLOMBIA: Moving Towards a Paramilitary State?
Analysis by Javier Darío Restrepo
BOGOTA - Visibly indignant, former Colombian president César Gaviria (1990-1994) denounced this week what he called an "appalling" article in a draft political reform law currently under debate in Congress.
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COLOMBIA: Security Bought at a Terrible Price, Report Warns
By Marina Litvinsky
WASHINGTON - Colombia’s government must urgently address human rights abuses to enhance its security policy and bring lasting peace to the country, says a new policy brief by the International Crisis Group (ICG).
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RIGHTS-COLOMBIA: Victims of State Crimes Speak Out
By Constanza Vieira
FLORENCIA, Colombia - In the midst of civil war and repression in San Vicente del Caguán, a municipality in southern Colombia, local communities and activists continue to hold forums to draw attention to human rights abuses. What keeps them going?
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COLOMBIA: Paramilitary Chief Says He Helped Finance Uribe’s Campaign
By Constanza Vieira*
BOGOTA - Former Colombian paramilitary chief and drug lord Diego Murillo, alias "Don Berna", testified in a U.S. court that he helped finance President Álvaro Uribe’s first election campaign, in 2002.
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Q&A: Indigenous People in Colombia "Have Become a Strong Force"
Mario Osava interviews indigenous leader AÍDA QUILCUÉ
BOGOTA - There is a heavy turnover of social movement leaders in Colombia, given the frequency with which they are killed, displaced or forced into exile. And because of the dangers, those who step up to the plate can be considered veritable heroes – one of whom is indigenous leader Aída Quilcué.
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Colombia - A Nation Torn in RSS As Colombia's nearly five-decade civil war simmers on, the country remains the world's third-largest recipient of U.S. military aid, and has the second-largest displaced population in the world. The cocaine trade continues to fuel the armed conflict; there are abundant reports indicating that the supposedly demobilised paramilitaries, blamed for the lion's share of the atrocities committed in the civil war and led by drug lords, have regrouped; and nearly half of the population lives in poverty. The scandal over ties with paramilitary groups dogs the Álvaro Uribe government. Small farmers and indigenous and black communities are often caught in the crossfire between the guerrillas, the paramilitaries and the security forces. The conflict's victims are the civilian population, human rights and truth.

Heavy Metal Colombia - El Blog de  Constanza Vieira
Special Report from Colombia - The Unusual Wealth of the Chocó
News in RSS
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
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  UNDP Colombia
  UN Refugee Agency - Colombia
  Consultancy on Human Rights and Displacement
  Colombian Commission of Jurists
  Millennium Campaign - MDGs and Colombia
  Amnesty International - Colombia
  Human Rights Watch - Colombia
  Acción Andina
  World Rainforest Movement

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