Riot Police Attack Communities Protesting Oil Exploitation in Colombia

After two weeks of peace­ful protest­ing against oil exploita­tion in Arau­ca, on Feb­ru­ary 12 that department’s social orga­ni­za­tions began a strike announced a few days ear­li­er as a response to the repeat­ed bro­ken promis­es by the nation­al gov­ern­ment and transna­tion­al com­pa­nies.

After two weeks of peace­ful protest­ing against oil exploita­tion in Arau­ca, on Feb­ru­ary 12 that department’s social orga­ni­za­tions began a strike announced a few days ear­li­er as a response to the repeat­ed bro­ken promis­es by the nation­al gov­ern­ment and transna­tion­al com­pa­nies.

The last attempt at dia­logue took place on Mon­day, Feb­ru­ary 11, between the Commission’s spokes­peo­ple (com­posed of a del­e­ga­tion of indige­nous peo­ple, peas­ants, youth, women, work­ers and com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers) and rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the Min­is­ter of the Inte­ri­or, as well as oil com­pa­nies that oper­ate in the region, with the goal of estab­lish­ing the con­di­tions that would allow the ful­fill­ment of those promis­es that they’ve been mak­ing since May 2012.

The repeat­ed lack of fol­low-through by the gov­ern­ment and busi­ness­es, and the delay in the nego­ti­a­tion process caused the frac­ture in the space for dia­logue, fol­lowed by the use of state force: approx­i­mate­ly 1,200 mem­bers of the Mobile Anti-Dis­tur­bance Squadron (the ESMAD in Span­ish) arrived to vio­lent­ly evict the com­mu­ni­ties at the protest sites.

The first act occurred on the walk­way San Isidro, over the de Tame road toward the Arau­ca cap­i­tal, at the gate to the petro­le­um com­plex Cari­care, which is used by the transna­tion­al com­pa­ny OXY, where ESMAD, the Police, and the Army assault­ed the mobi­lized com­mu­ni­ties by set­ting fires to the sur­round­ing pas­tures, dis­charg­ing their weapons, destroy­ing com­mon build­ings (a school), tak­ing away the food sup­plies to the pro­tes­tors,  and beat­ing and retain­ing four peo­ple.

As a result of the vio­lence, a preg­nant indige­nous woman who was pass­ing through lost her baby because of the effects of the tear gas, and had to receive emer­gency atten­tion at a med­ical cen­ter.

The police had kept local and nation­al reporters from con­tact­ing CM&, RCN, and oth­er local media that moved to Cari­care; the nation­al army set up a check­point in the sec­tor of Lipa that pro­hib­it­ed the pas­sage of reporters “for secu­ri­ty rea­sons.”  It should be not­ed that in the Quim­bo (Huila) events the police also restrict­ed the pres­ence of the media and act­ed out a series of vio­la­tions of basic human rights and Inter­na­tion­al Human­i­tar­i­an Rights (DIH).

In the face of the this sit­u­a­tion, the Human Rights Foun­da­tion Joel Sier­ra post­ed an Urgent Action which stat­ed its con­cern for the deten­tion of peo­ple, aggres­sion and bru­tal vio­lence exer­cised against the peas­ants and indige­nous peo­ples, the infrac­tions of the Inter­na­tion­al Human­i­tar­i­an Rights com­mit­ted by the police to vio­late and destroy civ­il instal­la­tions, and the removal of sup­plies for feed­ing those protest­ing. The Foun­da­tion also insist­ed that the Colom­bian State respect human rights and the Inter­na­tion­al Human­i­tar­i­an Rights norms.

In sim­i­lar form, Urgent Action denounced a series of vio­la­tions to the pro­tes­tors’ rights by the police, whose mem­bers have ded­i­cat­ed them­selves to con­stant­ly pho­to­graph those that par­tic­i­pate in the protests, have retained, inter­ro­gat­ed, and report­ed some of them, and have appeared in civil­ian cloth­ing and armed in the mid­dle of the night at the edges of the protest sites, among oth­er cas­es.

In the rest of the protest sites, like the gate to the petro­le­um com­plex of Caño Limón in the munic­i­pal­i­ty of Arau­ca, the town of Cari­care in Arauqui­ta, the bicen­ten­ni­al pipeline in Tamacay and el Tigre (Tame) and in Vil­la­m­a­ga (Sar­ave­na) and the fire sub­sta­tion of Banadías (Sar­ave­na), the author­i­ties have sent con­tin­gents from the army, the nation­al police, and the ESMAD, because they fear the same will hap­pen in those places that hap­pened in Cari­care.

It’s impor­tant to note that at this time peo­ple and vehi­cles can­not trav­el by land to get out­side of the depart­ment of Arau­ca by the only two major roads (Casanare and Norte de San­tander), and all com­merce and activ­i­ty is com­plete­ly par­a­lyzed in that region of the coun­try.