|
|
COLOMBIA: Caught in the Crossfire, Nasa Indians Take Shelter in Health Post By Constanza Vieira NATALA, Colombia, Apr 28 (IPS) - Hundreds of Nasa Indians in this rural area
of southwestern Colombia have taken shelter in their local health post,
perched on a hilltop with a breathtaking view of the Andes mountains, as the
gunfire between leftist guerrillas and the army rages below.
The building, where more than 500 indigenous people from the San Francisco
reserve, including 150 children, have been holed up for a week, is
surrounded by white flags made of sheets, plastic sacks and even a polka-dot
scarf, flapping in the wind on tall poles.
At the bottom of the slope, members of the leftist Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia (FARC) exchanged fire Monday with army troops located on
a hill across the valley. The gunfire continued all day long and into the
night.
The health post in the village of Natalá only has two bathrooms. The
"kitchen", an improvised shed thrown up on one side of the building, offered
potato soup and noodles for lunch when IPS visited.
Milciades Musicué, governor of the San Francisco indigenous reserve, in the
department (province) of Cauca, told IPS that some of the refugees sleep
inside the health post, "and others outside, and although a few mattresses
and blankets have arrived, there aren't enough to go around."
He said the most recent arrivals have come just to spend the night, "because
in our fear, being accompanied here gives us courage and strength."
"This isn't the whole community. There are 1,200 people in Natalá," said
Musicué, while the population of the entire reserve is 6,500.
Saturday evening "we were really scared because at around 5:00 the army
opened fire in this direction, and a bullet even hit the health post," he
added.
Things calmed down on Sunday, but on Monday the gunfire began again, forcing
part of the community to seek refuge elsewhere, because there was no more
room in the health post.
By then one child had already fallen ill with hepatitis A, and the staff at
the Nasa health post was hard-pressed to keep him isolated in the
overcrowded building. On Monday, chickenpox broke out as well.
The rebels have dug themselves in at the bottom of the hill, and their
position gives them control over one stretch of the road leading to the
nearby city of Toribío.
They have thus made it impossible for the army troops and their tanks to
cover the 20 kilometres separating the village of Tierrero, located on the
mountain across from Natalá, from Toribío.
The troops have thus been stuck in Tierrero for several days, although
official statements claim that the tanks have been making slow progress
towards Toribío, which they were supposed to have reached on Wednesday, Apr.
20.
Toribío, a town of 3,000 that is surrounded by Nasa Indian reserves, was
taken by storm between Apr. 14-16 by FARC, Colombia's largest insurgent
group, which has been fighting the army and right-wing paramilitary militias
for four decades.
On Saturday, Tierrero, which the tanks and troops were unable to leave, was
hit by FARC's homemade gas cylinder bombs roughly every 10 minutes.
Despite the dangers involved in stopping there, the soldiers stopped and
searched all passing vehicles.
That included the SUV in which this IPS correspondent and Nicole Karsin, a
freelance reporter from the United States sent by the San Francisco
Chronicle, were travelling, accompanied by five Nasa indigenous guards armed
only with decorated staffs representing their authority.
A bus full of passengers was also stopped and searched, as was an ambulance
carrying a dozen volunteer paramedics and doctors from the Salamandra
Foundation, on their way to providing assistance to the indigenous
community.
An officer told Karsin not to take pictures, and threatened to take "the
roll" out of her digital camera.
As Karsin was protesting the attempt to obstruct her work as a journalist, a
cylinder bomb hit a nearby gully, just below the military post and tanks,
causing the civilians in the area to panic and run.
FARC's homemade bombs, which can smash an armoured vehicle, have completely
destroyed 18 houses in Toribio and damaged 206 others, most of which will
have to be demolished later.
Both the government of right-wing President Alvaro Uribe and FARC have said
they will not back down in their struggle for control over this indigenous
area, where the current fighting has dragged on for two weeks.
"In the rural area, I think things are going to continue like this for 15
more days, or a month," said Arquimedes Vitonás, the mayor of Toribío.
Vitonás, a Nasa Indian activist, said he was worried because "people depend
on their day's wage, and this week they were unable to go to work...they
have no money to buy things in the market. And the coffee beans are starting
to fall off the bushes, because it's harvest time."
The mayor said that if the fighting goes on for another month, the 3,000
residents of Toribío will find themselves in dire financial straits.
With his "democratic security" policy, Uribe is attempting to retake the
parts of Colombia that are under insurgent control, while denying that the
country is in the midst of a civil war.
Rather than acknowledging that there is an armed conflict, the president
merely talks about the "terrorist threat" posed by the leftist rebel groups.
As part of its effort to regain control, the government reopened police
stations in Toribío and 15 other villages and towns in the region in late
2003.
The current fighting broke out when FARC launched an attack on the police
post in Toribío.
The government is putting an emphasis on fighting what it considers the FARC
rearguard, in southern Colombia, through the U.S.-financed Plan Patriot, to
which the U.S. armed forces have assigned a number of advisers.
Security analyst Alfredo Rangel commented to IPS that the government has
dedicated 20 percent of the military forces to Plan Patriot in the southern
Amazon jungle. Meanwhile, troops are stretched thin in regions like Cauca,
where he said the rebels are growing quickly in strength.
Rangel said the battle of Toribío, which has already extended to other towns
and villages, "is the most important test of military strength between FARC
and Uribe."
The president declared Tuesday in Bogota that he would "kick FARC out of
Cauca," and that it is necessary to "persist."
Governor Musicué said "If there were (peace) talks (with the guerrillas), we
would not be in the middle of this."
The peace talks with FARC collapsed in 2002, under then president Andrés
Pastrana (1998-2002).
"The national government says it has the area under control and that there
is no combat, but you yourselves can see that the fighting continues," said
Musicué. "It is one thing for (Uribe) to talk, sitting there comfortably and
getting a good night's sleep, but it's another thing to be here in the
middle of all these people, it's really hard."
He also said there is a big difference between giving the army orders from
afar and seeing how complicated the situation is on the ground, in such a
rugged mountainous area.
"The Nasa people were on red alert because of the violence that lay ahead.
We as authorities had to warn the people, in our community meetings," said
the governor.
"Right now, while we're all crammed in here together, what we are saying is
that we have to be patient, because where could we run to? We can't abandon
our land, because this is where we live, and this is where we'll die.
"We know that if we went to the cities we would only suffer greater hunger,
needs and poverty. We don't want to go to urban areas. Here we have our
fields of yucca, beans and corn, and we know that when the fighting lets up
a little, we can go out and harvest some food," said Musicué.
(END/2005)
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|