Beating out the rhythm of land liberation
by Hector Mondragón
If there had been justice and reparation for the victims of hundreds of massacres committed
in the last twenty years in the Colombian countryside, as well as those committed between 1946 and
1958 and in previous waves of violence, the principal measure would be to
return their land to the campesinos, indigenous people and afro-colombians who
have time and again been throw off Mother Earth by blood and fire. As dawn came on 2 September 2005, two hundred comuneros - community
activists - from the Indigenous Reserve of Nasa de Huellas dared to implement
the decision of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, the Court established
that the Colombian state should hand back their land as part of an integral
reparation to victims of a massacre committed by paramilitaries on 19
September 1991 in the Nilo hacienda - large farmstead - that the
indigenous people had occupied. Twenty of them, children included, were
assassinated. Tired of waiting fourteen years for just compensation, the comuneros
occupied the "La Emperatriz" hacienda. They did not have
to wait long for the repression, but it had an unexpected result: every police
assault, the gassing, the presence of the Army, and shooting against the
people, with many wounded by gunshot, did not terrorise them, rather it
enflamed the spirit of civil resistance in the heart of more and more
indigenous people. It was impossible to dislodge the occupiers and with each
day more arrived. When on 13 September the Minister of the Interior negotiated
with the Nasa there were 3,500 people in the occupation, with yet more
occupying another hacienda called "Guayabal". This event marked an historic change, it was the first defeat for
the terror that in Colombia paralysed direct action to free land from the hands
of the landlords. The Nilo massacre signified that the death penalty would be
applied to whoever dared to challenge the masters - a sentence applied to
campesinos, indigenous and afro-colombians without discrimination. So, between 2 and 6 November 2003 the terror was hurled at the
members of SINTRAGRITOL (Tolima Union of Agricultural Workers) in Cajamarca,
who the previous March had occupied a farm called “La Manigua”, the property
of a Colombian ambassador. Five campesinos were brutally tortured and
assassinated, and eighteen were 'disappeared'. At the same place, on 10 April
2004 the Army killed another three campesinos, a baby and a child. All this cruelty against whoever dares to liberate the land
consolidate a gigantic agrarian counter-reform which means that today 61% of
registered rural property belongs to just 0.4% of the population, some fifteen
thousand people, one of which is President Alvaro Uribe Ve'lez. Nearly 70% of
Congressmen also form part of this select group, which has the support of the
United States through Plan Colombia which is designed to defend this status quo
in compensation for the commitment of Colombia's dominant
class for the Free Trade Agreement (FTA - TLC) and Free Trade Area of the
Americas (FTAA-ALCA), and for the modification of oil, mining, forestry and
water legislation... An exchange that also guarantees for the big landlords
speculative profits on the price of land in the areas close to the investments
and mega-projects of the multinationals. This consolidates latifundismo - big landlordism - that is
based not on agricultural production but on speculation. The plantations, especially
of African palm, and the exploitation of forests and cattle ranching all have
the function of guaranteeing territorial domination and not production as
such. Uribe's government started to approve the laws necessary to legalise the
ejection of three million displaced people off their lands. The law reduces the
time for newly acquired property to be registered. There is an overall
development plan. Recent resolutions have legalised African palm crops planted
on the community lands of afro-colombians as soon as they have been thrown off
their lands, this is part of a norm to perpetuate the violent seizures. And the
agreement with the paramilitaries (the Justice and Peace law - see FLA No 1)
is the final touch to launder their lands and money. As a counterpart, the action of the Nasa at "La Emperatriz"
has been the true launching of the slogan "Justice and Reparation"
for the victims of this infamous empire. The Nasa people have been the first to
make this call come true, because it was them who in September 2004 convened
the Grand Minga - great gathering - that marched all the way to Cali
with 60,000 indigenous people opposed to Uribe's constitutional reform projects
and to violence; to say no to the FTA and yes to life, and the project of
self-government of the peoples. The Nasa were also the backbone of the popular
consultation against the FTA that took place in six
municipalities in Cauca when the people voted categorically to reject the
monstrosity of "free" trade with the United States, which is
indissolubly linked with the speculative agrarian counter-reform and the
destruction of national agriculture. The successful resistance of the Nasa at "La Emperatriz"
broke downthe terror tying down peoples minds. The campesinos, the Misak (Guambiano),
Coconucos and all the Nasa indigenous people saw clearly "as when a flash
of lightning illuminates the night as though it were dawn". Even though
there are many contradictions between them, that have for years impeded them
acting together, they all arrived at the same unanimous conclusion: the moment
to recommence the liberation of the land had arrived. Each group decided on their own account that the day would be 12
October, the 513rd anniversary of the initiation of resistance, and a day on
which the trade union centres had convened a national stoppage. Campesinos and
indigenous groups from Cauca department took over 15 haciendas including
Corinto and Miranda, where three thousand campesinos reclaimed their right to
land; the old Cocunuco hacienda was divided into four farms that were
occupied by indigenous groups and peasants from Paleterá, Puracé and Coconuco;
El Japio in Caloto was occupied by Nasa indigenous people from Caldono, Los
Remedies in Silva municipality was occupied by the Kisgó people, and the Misaks
occupied Amabalo. Each event repeated what had happened at La Emperatriz. On several
occasions the police said over the television, radio and daily press that the occupiers
had been dislodged, while as many times the television pictures showed the
occupiers still firmly in the farms. For the first time millions of Colombians
directly saw confrontations for the land. In only those cases where agreements
were made did the occupiers withdraw under their own will, in the others, as at
El Japio, they stayed in occupation. The national government and the government of Cauca department
wanted to pretend that the occupations had only been by indigenous groups, and
through the mass media they accused the Indians of having a lot of land
"at the expense of the campesinos and blacks". But the occupations
showed the reality of a campesino-indigenous alliance. The indigenous "lot
of land" is not in Cauca, where just 800 landlords own the same amount of
land as 200,000 indigenous people, nor in the rest of the Andes, but in the
Amazon region where the state has done nothing more than recognise the possession
of Amazonian peoples from time immemorial. In an inter-ethnic meeting that took
place at Santander de Quilichao, the afro-colombians did not denounce the indigenous
people, but the government for throwing them off their lands, and they
strengthened their alliance with the Nasa. Demonstrations organised by the latifundista Governor of Cauca against the
indigenous people were poorly attended who were urban 'peasants' and public
employees. Much more importantly, one could see that what occurred in Cauca
was part of a national mobilisation of indigenas, campesinos and afros,
As well as in Cauca, the neighbouring departments of Nariño and Valle
witnessed further occupations, 25 thousand people demanded an immediate
solution to their situation of critical poverty. At Inzá (Cauca) five thousand
campesinos and indígenas blocked the highway. Between Mallama and Ricaurte in
Nariño four thousand campesinos and indígenas from the Awá people marched for
two days against the FTA and the policy of 'democratic security', and for
respect for human rights. At San Miguel two thousand campesinos blocked the
road between La Vega (Cauca) and Popayán in support of the national strike, for
the liberation of Mother Earth and an agrarian law. At a place called Gabriel
López a thousand campesinos blocked the road to Huila. Four thousand people
marched from "Mi Bohío" in the south of Cauca to Popayán where they
joined up with an urban march. In Barbacoas (Narifio) three thousand
afro-Colombians and campesinos took over the town centre demanding drinking
water and solutions to substitute for illegal crops. Five thousand afros marched in
Buenaventura in support of the strike and in protest and government resolutions
that eliminate their rights. In Caldas and Risaralda the Embera mobilised
massively for a Minga in defence of their territories. The march was prohibited
by the government -yet managed to finish, despite repression that left one
indigena dead and several injured. Twenty thousand campesinos and small farmers
from Tolima and Huila departments, and indigenous people from Huila gathered in
the city of Neiva to reject the FTA. There were campesino demonstrations in
Fusagasuga (Cundimarca), Tunja and Ventaquemada (Boyacá). Five thousand
indigenous people marched between Sampués and Sincelejo where they joined the
trade union march. In Santa Rosa in South Bolivar a procession of a thousand
artisan miners protested against the multinational Kedahda, a subsidiary of
AngloGold Ashanti that wants to take over the exploitation of gold in the San
Lucas mountains. The mobilisation of 12 October was evident proof of the new assent
in the campesino, afro and indigena struggle, that had already been a fact felt
through the Indigenous Gathering in Tolima a month before; in the two multi-day
marches to Carmen de Bolívar; in two uprisings against the paramilitaries in
San Pablo (South Bolívar); and civil stoppages in several localities along the
Pacific coast. The government fears that the liberation of Mother Earth will
extend, and so on the afternoon of 8 November they attacked the Nasa occupying
El Japio with armoured cars, police squads and fire arms. They want to kill the
struggle and on 10 November they did kill <i>Belisario Camayo Wetetó</i>, a 16 year
old indigenous guard, they shot and wounded Gerson Menza, detained and wounded
several more community activists - comuneros. While the Nasa resisted the
police attacks at El Japio, on 9 November the Misak have occupied the
"Corazón" in Piendamó. Hundreds of campesinos united with indigenas
to occupy from 10 November three farms in Morales municipality, also in Cauca. The drums have sounded and we have all heard them. They will not
stop beating until the land is free. [translated by Andy Higginbottom, Colombia Solidarity Campaign]