CARTAGENA, Colombia, February 6 (UNHCR) More than 130 local and international organisations, including UNHCR, have joined
forces with the Colombian authorities to launch the 2007 Campaign for the Rights of Displaced People.The campaign aims to focus attention on the three million people displaced by armed
conflict in Colombia and to lobby for their rights. Colombia's displaced make up about eight percent of the country's total population and represent the largest single group of concern to UNHCR
anywhere in the world.The launch took place last Friday in the popular tourist destination of Cartagena a national treasure on the Atlantic coast full of remnants of the Spanish
colonial era during a conference of the G24, an informal group of countries supporting peace and development in Colombia.Cartagena is also a symbol of Colombia's humanitarian crisis.
More than 40,000 people are registered as displaced in the city, but the authorities acknowledge that as in the rest of the country the real figures could be much higher because many
people are too scared to come out of hiding.While the tourists enjoy the beauty of the old town, many displaced people in Cartagena live in virtual slums. Like many others displaced in the
country, they face daily problems with housing, education, health and access to work. Ten years after Colombia adopted a national law to protect the internally displaced, many still do not enjoy the
full exercise of their rights."This is a big demonstration of solidarity," UNHCR Representative in Colombia Roberto Meier said at the campaign launch, which was attended by senior
government officials, opposition politicians and members of 132 civil organisations. "Different sectors of Colombian society are coming together to send one message 'We will not tolerate
indifference towards displaced persons'," he added.An initiative of several non-governmental organisations and the Catholic Church, the UNHCR-backed campaign is fast gathering support
from Colombian society and the international community. A cross-party group of parliamentarians has put forward a draft law supporting the campaign's objectives.This year's campaign has
started amid growing UNHCR concern over attacks on displaced people and their organisations. In recent weeks, several leaders of the displaced have been killed including two in the Atlantic
Coast region in the past two weeks.Last month, in a Cartagena suburb, an arson attack destroyed a community centre belonging to the League of Displaced Women (Liga de Mujeres
Desplazadas), one of UNHCR's oldest partners in Colombia. UNHCR has pledged to reconstruct the building, which it originally funded in 2004.In a strong gesture of international solidarity,
the ambassadors to Colombia of Canada, Argentina, Austria and the Netherlands as well as representatives of the Swedish embassy visited the League's "City of Women" in the
Cartagena suburb on Saturday with UNHCR.The campaign will seek to focus attention, within Colombia and abroad, on organisations like the League of Displaced Women. In bringing together a large
section of Colombian society, it will seek to ensure that millions of displaced people are not left without protection and promotion of their rights.In Geneva on Tuesday, meanwhile, UNHCR
spokeswoman Jennifer Pagonis reiterated the agency's concern about the series of recent attacks on displaced people and their organisations and renewed a call on all armed groups in the country to
respect international humanitarian law and leave civilians out of the conflict."We also request the Colombian government to continue to increase its efforts to protect displaced
people," she told reporters. More than 170,000 people were forcibly displaced last year, according to government figures.By Gustavo Valdivieso In Cartagena,
Colombia