In the face of seemingly endless suffering, impetus for peace in Colombia gathers momentum. Terror, political persecution, arbitrary detentions, and militarization dominate. State-mediated killings now run into the tens of thousands. More than four million rural inhabitants have been displaced from sustenance-providing land.
Having recently announced its last ten prisoners held for ransom would be released, and having signaled its decision no longer to raise money through hostage-taking, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) has propelled movement toward peace.
The insurgent group wants to humanize the conflict, said Piedad Cordoba, president of Colombians for Peace. The Brazilian government agreed to provide logistical support for any prisoner release. Justice Minister Juan Carlos Esguerra granted Cordobas request that representatives of her group visit FARC prisoners in state hands, and then reneged. Cordoba has proposed a bilateral truce to open space for dialogue.
Peace is on hold, however, for two reasons. One, peace proponents insist war be ended only through negotiations on issues propelling the war, foremost among them skewed division of land. Two, uncertainty prevails as to whether or not negotiations are possible while fighting continues.
In Colombia, 60 years ago decades of peasant uprisings morphed into war between agrarian-based insurgents and the state. Formed in 1964, the FARC immediately set forth an agrarian program. On JUly 1964, its detailed proclamation declared, "we are victims of big landowner fury, and that great masters of the land prevail in this part of Colombia (Marquetalia). They are allied to financial monopolies connected with imperialism." The FARC called for handing over land completely free to farmers who would work it.
Struggle over land in Colombia epitomizes class confrontation. The victim class today comprises millions of persons displaced from the land. Today, poverty in Colombia hovers around 65 percent, and most of the displaced suffer from poor schooling, inadequate health care, and under-nutrition. Perpetrators are mine owners, petroleum producers, dam builders, corporate farmers, narco-trafficking entrepreneurs, and financiers.
The land question emerged on March 6, International Day for Victims of State Crimes. The National Movement of Victims of State Crimes (MOVICE) that day organized national and international demonstrations centering on rejection of the governments 2011 Law of Victims and Restitution of Land.
MOVICE charged that the law provides no restitution for losses of non-land properties and that it parcels out land through surface contracts covering only habitation and use contracts opening the door for exploitative projects. For MOVICE, the law protects paramilitaries colluding with military and police commanders, business interests, and political elites.
Supporting the MOVICE position on dispossessed lands and territories, the Communist Party in Antioquia claimed that so far under the law, only 2,500 acres have been returned.
Likewise, the recent, well-attended "Colombia Behind Bars" forum in Bogota condemned terror at the hands of major landowners in the interests of big money. A concluding declaration called for true agrarian reform and demanded political negotiation and structural changes. It denounced U.S. imperialism.
Meanwhile, local, national and international demonstrations against the Quimbo hydroelectric project in Huila, projected to flood 20,400 acres, protested loss of land. The Spanish Italian Endesa Corporation building the mega project is developing giant hydroelectric projects in Chilean Patagonia that have likewise provoked resistance.
FARC’s consistency on land was clear in the February, 2012 declaration "Our Land," authored by secretariat member Ivan Marquez. Amidst decadence and systematic capitalist crisis, our land, ours because we were born on it our own country has been converted today, says Marquez, into a treasure coveted by transnational piracy. Capitalist greed has converted geography and territory into an obsession… We have lived through a quarter century of violent dispossession captained by the state years of land expropriation, paramilitary massacres, and forced displacement.
Whether a military truce should precede peace negotiations, or visa versa, is now under intense discussion in Colombia. In an interview, Carlos Lozano, director of the Communist Party’s "Voz" newspaper, commended FARC prisoner release plans as an historic decision. While denouncing government fixation on military victory, Lozano called for government-FARC preliminary dialogue, in secret, followed by national dialogue centering on outstanding issues.
By contrast, MOVICE head and congressperson Ivan Cepeda insisted, "We must look for the war to end as soon as possible." Interviewed in early March, Cepeda held up military truce as a first step. "During war, there’s an absence of political forces necessary to achieve great structural changes," he declared. Cepeda speaks as a victim: state agents in 1994 murdered his father Manuel Cepeda, a former senator and director of "Voz."
An outside observer notes that Colombian discussion about a fragile peace process only infrequently touches upon the confounding factor — U.S. political, military, and economic support for repression there. It is as if, perhaps, the onus for confronting that dimension of the war in Colombia falls upon the U. S. solidarity community.
The class-based nature of struggle in Colombia, especially over land, would seem to ground that obligation upon the understanding that peace and anti-imperialism go together.
March 25, 2012