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Colombia was the deadliest country in the world for activists last year

Almost half of all human rights defenders murdered in 2022 were from the Latin American nation, accounting for 186 killings โ€“ or 46% โ€“ of the global total registered during that period.

Last year was the deadliest on record for human rights activists in Colombia.

According to a new report by non-profit Front Line Defenders, of the 401 people promoting environmental, racial, and gender justice killed in 2022, 186 were Colombian, with scores more beaten, detained, and criminalised because of their work.

With this figure accounting for 46 per cent of the global total registered during that period, the Latin American nation is facing immense international pressure to stop violence against social leaders (as theyโ€™re locally referred to in Colombia).

Unfortunately, such calls to address this evidently grave challenge have had little effect throughout the countryโ€™s recent history.

This is because activism has long been a dangerous vocation in Colombia. From the right-wing paramilitary groups that murdered trade unionists, Communists, and locals between the 1980s and early 2000s, to present day wherein, despite the 2016 peace accord aimed at improving conditions in rural areas controlled by illegal gangs, activists are still routinely targeted by armed groups.

Marta Hurtado, spokeswoman for theย United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rightsย attributes this to a โ€˜vicious and endemic cycle of violence and impunity in Colombia.โ€™

Essentially, when the FARC disbanded, Colombian officials were supposed to build infrastructure and secure zones which had been at war for generations.

But when those promises went unfulfilled, armed criminal and paramilitary groups moved in to fill the vacuum that the FARC had left behind, seeking territorial control for drug trafficking and illegal mining.

As a result, the staggering number of deaths have happened in remote locations with higher-than-average rates of poverty where governments struggle to intervene.

โ€˜In a grim milestone, for the first time we saw more than 400 targeted killings of human rights defenders in 2022,โ€™ says Olive Moore, director of Front Line Defenders.

โ€˜While Latin America remained the deadliest region in the world for human rights defenders, we also saw a more dangerous landscape for defenders in the context of Russiaโ€™s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.โ€™

What Moore refers to here, is the fact that Colombia saw more than three times the number of human rights murders than Ukraine last year, which was the country with the second highest number of activists killed in 2022, with 50 registered cases.

Across the different human rights sectors, defenders fighting for the protection of land and Indigenous peoplesโ€™ rights were the most frequently targeted.

They were also most disproportionately affected in Colombia last year, where 88 lethal attacks against them were recorded over just 12 months.

โ€˜These human rights defenders were deliberately targeted and killed because of their human rights work. Because they choose to speak out and challenge injustice, they paid for it with their lives,โ€™ continues Moore.

โ€˜This ongoing harassment has failed to deter human rights defenders from continuing their work. If anything, it has galvanised them to keep countering the repression and standing up for justice. The international community must stand in solidarity with them, and do all they can to protect defenders.’

In response, the government of Gustavo Petro โ€” Colombiaโ€™s first-ever leftist president โ€” has proposed in his โ€˜total peaceโ€™ policy to initiate peace talks with armed groups such as the ELN guerrillas and to reach out to FARC dissidents who refused to sign the peace accord, as well as the Gulf Clan cartel, with whom the government announced a truce.

Ombudsman Carlos Camargo expressed hope that such talks would lead to a reduction in actions against leaders of human rights groups and ultimately put an end to the vilification of those mobilising for change and pushing back against deepening authoritarianism and closing civic space.

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