A/HRC/16/45/Add.1
51.
Assistance programmes are targeted towards officially registered IDPs. However,
several factors impede registration of the entire affected population, excluding some from
receiving assistance. Among those factors are lack of awareness of the registration process;
fear of coming forward; lack of access to registration locations; administrative barriers; and
rejection on the basis of criteria which exclude certain causes of displacement (for example
displacement due to aerial fumigations). The Constitutional Court directed the Government
to improve registration systems; however, in 2009 Acción Social refused 36 per cent of
registration applications, citing fraudulent claims as the main reason for rejection and
ineligible claims in a small percentage of cases27. The Government notes that as of
31 October 2010, 4,516,246 people have claimed to be victims of forced displacement. Of
these, 3,573,179 (79.1 per cent) were included in the Registry of Displaced Persons and
20.9 per cent of claimants were rejected. NGOs identify a high percentage of arbitrary
denials.
D.
Responses of security forces
52.
The Vice Minister of Defence and commanders of operational brigades in AfroColombian regions28 described to the independent expert efforts to integrate into the
training of every soldier and police officer respect for the human rights and the needs of
Afro-Colombian communities. They emphasize that through supervision, training, outreach
and accountability, steps are being taken to break with the pattern of past violations.
Directive 07 of 2007 of the Ministry of National Defence is aimed at strengthening the
policy for recognition, prevention and protection of the rights of Afro-Colombians.
53.
Government initiatives may have improved security in some areas. However AfroColombian community members claim that certain practices, including increased military
presence in sensitive areas and the extensive use of civilian informers, may put
communities and individuals at heightened risk by feeding the perception by illegal armed
groups that they are collaborating with the security forces. Civilian community members
have been murdered or subjected to detention when armed groups or security forces accuse
them of collaborating with their enemy29. Communities consequently feel threatened by all
armed actors.
E.
The Office of the Ombudsman
54.
The Office of the Ombudsman was widely praised for its activities to protect AfroColombian leaders and communities, particularly through an early warning (Sistema de
Alerta Temprana – SAT) and risk assessment system coordinated with local government
and public security forces. The Ombudsman has local representatives (defensores
comunitarios) in highly sensitive areas where the presence of State authorities is weak.
They have the trust of communities and often operate under difficult conditions and
sometimes death threats from illegal armed groups.
55.
Civil society and community groups can submit reports to representatives of the
Ombudsman, who act as a link to regional authorities. While the Ombudsman’s office
identifies credible threats on the ground, their alerts are assessed by a senior national-level
committee, the Comité Interinstitucional de Alertas Tempranas (CIAT), of the security
forces and civil institutions, which has frequently discounted the credibility of those alerts.
27
28
29
Idem.
Including XVII Brigade and District Police in Chocó and 2nd Marine Brigade in Buenaventura.
See A/HRC/4/48, para. 64.
13