E/CN.4/2004/18/Add.3
page 11
II. PRESENTATION OF THE SITUATION BY
THE COMMUNITIES CONCERNED
32.
The representatives of the indigenous peoples, the Afro-Colombian and Raizal
communities, as well as the Roma, have stated the Government’s efforts to improve their
situation remain insufficient. They described their respective situations by providing figures on
the impact of the domestic conflict on members of their communities. They drew attention to the
precarious economic and social conditions in which they lived and the persistence of an
ethnocentric culture that tended to place emphasis on Colombia’s Hispanic heritage and to
marginalize the diverse contributions of the indigenous peoples, Afro-Colombians and the Roma
to the creation of the Colombian nation, in spite of the fact that the Constitution proclaims that
Colombia is a multicultural State.
A. Situation of the indigenous peoples
33.
The representatives of the indigenous peoples expressed their dissatisfaction to the
Special Rapporteur regarding their economic and social situation and their relations with the
Government. They consider that the national and local authorities do not respect the autonomy
that they have been granted by texts (particularly Act No. 152/94). They believe that the
indigenous territories are in a state of economic, political, social and environmental emergency
owing to the increase in poverty and the diseases that are rife in their communities, and the lack
of respect for their way of life, which is highly dependent on the natural environment. National
and local development plans do not take account of the aspirations of the indigenous peoples,
and the exploitation of natural resources, particularly oil and wood, without the consent of the
populations concerned encroaches on their territorial rights and is harmful to their environment.
In general, the level of education in the resguardos is low owing to a lack of teachers and
educational facilities.
B. Situation of the Afro-Colombian Raizal communities
34.
The impact of government policies on the economic and social situation of
Afro-Colombians is still weak. Representatives of the Afro-Colombian communities consider
that the progress made by previous Governments in support of their communities has eroded.
In its communication, the Government acknowledges that 82 per cent of Afro-Colombians
continue to live in conditions where basic needs (running water, electricity, sanitation and so
on) were not met; and that the illiteracy rate among the Afro-Colombian population is three
times higher than that of the rest of the population (43 per cent in rural areas and 20 per cent
in urban areas as opposed to 23.4 per cent and 7.3 per cent, respectively, for the rest of the
population); out of 100 Afro-Colombian young people, only 2 go on to higher studies; the
infant mortality rate is 151 per thousand, while the national average is 39 per thousand; and
76 per cent of Afro-Colombians live in conditions of extreme poverty and 42 per cent are
unemployed. The department of Chocó, where the Special Rapporteur visited Quibdó, the
principal city, is symbolic in this regard. Quibdó, which concentrates all the problems faced by
Afro-Colombian communities, seems to have been abandoned. Similarly, in Cartagena, the
beautiful Caribbean tourist resort, there are many pockets of poverty in which Afro-Colombians
live. The same situation can be seen in the streets of Cali and the huge shantytown of Agua
Blanca in which 600,000 people live in very unhealthy conditions.