Is Colombia seeing more war than peace?
What is the current situation in Colombia?
Since January 16, the guerrilla group ELN and offshoots of the former militant organization FARC have been clashing in the rural Catatumbo region in northeast Columbia, near the border with Venezuela. At least 80 people have died so far in the violence.
At least 20 more people have been killed in clashes in the Amazonas region in the south of the country, between rival splinter groups of FARC.
According to the Colombian military, almost 20,000 people have fled their homes for safer areas amid the extreme violence.
"They have pulled people from their houses and cruelly murdered them," army commander General Luis Emilio Cardozo said in an internet video. "It is our job as the national army to stabilize the region."
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called for an "immediate cessation of acts of violence against the civilian population," said UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric on Wednesday. "The secretary-general is deeply concerned about the recent violence in the Catatumbo region of Colombia."
The rival left-wing extremist groups in the Catatumbo region are seeking to gain control over human trafficking, the weapons trade, illegal mining, the cultivation of drugs and the cocaine trade. The region is seen as strategically important, as an area where drugs can easily be transported out of the country.
Daniel Parra, a researcher for the Peace and Reconciliation Foundation in Cucuta in the northeast of Colombia, told DW he cannot say precisely what has triggered the current clashes between the ELN and the FARC splinter groups.
"Some national media have cited military intelligence that everything happened after the loss of a cocaine delivery and the murder of an ELN head of finance," he said. "But we know nothing for certain about why this armed confrontation broke out."
According to Roberto Garcia Alonso, a professor for law and politics at La Sabana University, near Bogota, the basic reason for the violence is clear: drugs.
"The fight for territorial control and the drug trade, which have always been central elements in this conflict, is putting more and more pressure on this border region, which serves as a corridor for the drug trade with Venezuela," he said.
How long have such conflicts been going on?
There have been armed conflicts between leftist guerrilla groups, drug gangs, right-wing paramilitaries and the army in Colombia since the 1960s, leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people.
Some 7 to 8 million people have been displaced, and around 80,000 Colombians are still classified as "missing."
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