The protracted internal armed conflict in
Colombia had to May 2009 displaced almost 3.1 million people according to the government, and over 4.6 million people according to a reliable non-governmental source. Nevertheless, under-registration
in the governmentâs system remains pervasive. In 2008, Colombiaâs highest administrative court derogated a decree that determined that internally displaced people
(IDPs) could only be included in the national registry up to one year after being displaced, and in January, 2009, the Constitutional Court directed the government to decisively tackle this problem by
improving registration systems.
All parties to the conflict, including guerrilla groups, the new armed groups which have emerged since the demobilisation of paramilitaries, and state
forces, are responsible for forced displacement and human rights abuses and violations. According to a recent survey, threats directed at civilians by the illegal armed groups have become the single
greatest cause of internal displacement. Human rights violations by government forces have continued, including systematic extra-judicial executions. Additionally, aerial fumigations of illegal crops,
which also destroy other crops, have caused displacement by causing food insecurity. Finally, human rights defenders, including IDP leaders, have continued to be threatened, attacked, and killed, and
discredited by government.
The governmentâs response to the plight of IDPs has continued to improve, but not enough to meet the benchmarks set by the Constitutional Court.
The Court has ordered significant amendments to government policy and programmes for IDPs and has continued to measure the enjoyment of rights of the displaced population, declaring in January 2009
that the âunconstitutional state of affairsâ in the governmentâs response for IDPs, originally declared in 2004, continued. In June 2009, a proposed
law to protect and provide reparations to victims of conflict, the so-called âvictimsâ lawâ, was defeated by a government majority in the House of
Representatives.
The Courtâs data shows that the biggest gaps relate to housing, income generation, and protection of land. Much more needs to be done to prevent new
displacement, protect the displaced population, and implement durable solutions through effective reparations and solutions other than return â" only three per cent of the displaced
population wish to return to their place of origin under the current conditions.
An internally displaced girl, who fled a military offensive in the Swat valley region, stands outside her family tent at the UNHCR (United Nations High Commission for Refugees) Jalozai camp, about ...