Collective Human Rights Protection in Colombia: Afro-Colombian and Indigenous Experiences in the Pacific Region
The Colombian State has legal obligations and public policy commitments to provide collective human rights protection measures, but its actions to implement them are still scarce and insufficient. According to the testimonies of social leaders of ethno-territorial organizations who participated in two learning exchanges, the government’s protection measures often do not meet the needs of the communities, nor do they fit the context or characteristics of the territories where they live.
Many ethno-territorial organizations in Colombia have requested collective protection measures from the government via diverse institutional processes that all face similar bureaucratic challenges. They have not seen a coordinated response from the government. The government’s approach to providing protection measures involves challenges for the organizations at risk, including a focus on individualized rather than collective initiatives that can protect entire organizations, an emphasis on police/military-style approaches rather than comprehensive protection measures, as well as confusion due to the government’s many different, complex, bureaucratic processes (“routes”) for organizations seeking protection measures. Participants in the learning exchange reported delays and inefficiency in the government’s provision of services, as well as a lack of political will to deliver on its commitments.
So far, these ethno-territorial organizations tend to seek governmental protection measures by each following their own routes, without coordinated and sustained joint initiatives to mutually reinforce each other in the face of the same institutional bottlenecks. Among local and national government agencies, there is a widely-held assumption that official protection measures are the exclusive responsibility of just one agency, the National Protection Unit (UNP). In contrast, ethno-territorial organizations call for comprehensive collective protection measures, which would require the intervention of multiple government agencies. The advocacy experience of the Community Council of San Juan (ACADESAN) shows that many other government agencies can indeed commit to providing multiple collective protection measures. However, more than a year after numerous agencies signed commitments, most of their actions have fallen short. This underscores the relevance of ongoing monitoring and advocacy to encourage them to deliver results.