Dear friends
This month we bring you news from Colombia, Brazil, Peru, Venezuela, Chile and Argentina. The Colombian Ombudsman reports that 215 social leaders and human rights defenders were killed in 2022. Brazil‘s new Environment Minister has called on an investigation into former President Bolsonaro for genocide of indigenous people. Amnesty has presented its initial findings of its investigation into the repression of the massive protests in different areas of Peru since December last year. In Venezuela, 187 acts of persecution and criminalization committed by the Maduro government were recorded in January 2023 We have some good news from Chile, following on from last month’s Urgent Action. Two years on from the legalisation of abortion, there is an update from Argentina.
COLOMBIA

2022 in front of his family in Caquetá department
The Colombian Ombudsman reports that 215 social leaders and human rights defenders were killed in 2022, the highest number since the Peace Accords of 2016. The murders coincide with places that are strategically important to organized crime groups involved in drug trafficking, illegal mining and contraband. These armed groups include former paramilitaries, FARC dissidents, ELN guerrillas and organised crime such as the Clan de Golfo cartel. The new government has launched a ‘Total Peace’ plan which includes ceasefires by the ELN, Clan de Golfo and other armed groups.
The Inter American Court of Human Rights has called for reparations for the victims of systematic violence by the Colombian state against 6,000 members and militants of the Patriotic Union. This ‘manifested itself through various acts, such as forced disappearances, massacres, extrajudicial executions and murders, threats, attacks, various acts of stigmatization, improper prosecutions, torture, and forced displacement, among others.’ The Patriotic Union was founded as a political party in 1985 by the FARC following a 1985 peace accord with the government. Colombia has promised to pay the reparations.
Semana reports the Office of the Inspector General of the Nation has asked for five Army generals to be investigated for the March 2022 killings of 11 civilians in the village of Remanso in Putumayo department. This follows an exhaustive investigation into the killings by the Inspector General, who found that the alleged drug traffickers targeted by the Army were known not to be there at the time.
Peace Brigades International relates the risk to Catatumbo rural communities attempting to comply with the Peace Accords of 2016. The government has failed to provide farmers with alternative crops to coca, poppy and marijuana or to alternative sources of income. Organizations that defend the Peace Agreement from inside Catatumbo “today, are more threatened and are victims of multiple types of attacks, such as accusations and assassination attempts.”
Six months into his presidency, the Financial Times reports on President Petro’s return to ‘the revolutionary rhetoric of his youth,‘ with the intention of pushing through major reforms to pensions, healthcare and the labour market. However, it is unsure from where the government will obtain the necessary funding for these reforms.
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