Pubdate: Mon, 30 Sep 2002 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2002 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Salim Muwakkil Note: Salim Muwakkil is a senior editor at In These Times Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) AFRO-COLOMBIANS SUFFER THE MOST IN THE NEVER-ENDING DRUG WAR Luis Gilberto Murillo was 31 when he was elected the youngest governor ever in Colombia. Now 36, he lives in exile in Maryland and spends most of his time speaking out against U.S. policies toward his South American country. He argues that our emphasis on military aid fuels Colombia's civil war and does little to stem the flow of illegal drugs--the purported purpose of U.S. policy. His arguments are important as Congress soon will consider whether to lessen restrictions on our military aid to Colombia. Murillo is an Afro-Colombian from the state of Choco and was governor of his home region in 1998-1999. His aggressive policies on behalf of the country's indigenous and Afro-Colombian populations and his declaration of Choco as a neutral zone soon earned him the enmity of powerful right-wing forces. In 2000, he was kidnapped by a paramilitary group and threatened with death. Later that year he fled to the U.S. with his family. Murillo was in town last week speaking at Trinity United Church of Christ on the South Side during the same time Colombian President Alvaro Uribe was visiting President Bush seeking to increase the $1.3 billion in aid to his country supplied under the anti-drug campaign called Plan Colombia. Uribe reportedly wants to shift Plan Colombia from an anti-drug program to a counter-terrorism campaign and is petitioning Bush for additional funds to do that. I asked Murillo if he had any advice for the two men. "I would tell both Presidents Uribe and Bush that a military solution is impossible," he said in lightly accented English. "The Colombian military and its allied paramilitary groups can't easily defeat the guerrillas. The fight will go on endlessly and, meanwhile, the people will suffer." Murillo was somewhat of a prodigy in his native country; he scored the highest mark on Colombia's national baccalaureate exam and had been on the fast track ever since. He was appointed to a number of prestigious government positions throughout the 1990s and in 1997 was drafted by a coalition of Afro- Colombian organizations to be the gubernatorial candidate for Choco. While people of African descent comprise anywhere from 26 to 43 percent of the Colombian population (census numbers conflict), they virtually are invisible in national politics and media. The majority of Afro-Colombians live on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts and are descendants of the enslaved Africans forced to work in mines, sugar plantations, cattle ranches, textile mills and as domestics from the first decade of the 16th Century to slavery's abolition in 1851. "Many Africans fought for the freedom as soon as they arrived in Colombia and escaped to free African towns called palenques," Murillo explained. Most of these palenques were situated in remote areas of thick rainforests, located primarily in the region now known as Choco. The Afro-Colombian population remains concentrated in these areas. Large populations of Afro-Colombians also live in the cities of Cartagena, Medellin, Cali, Quibdo and Bogota. Murillo said most Afro-Colombians feel no allegiance to any of the warring parties in the nation's civil war. He strongly opposes the war policies of the Uribe government. He has some sympathy for the egalitarian rhetoric of the FARC (the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the umbrella group of left-wing guerrillas), but he is less tolerant of their ruthless behavior. "One of my good friends was recently assassinated by a guerrilla group. Unfortunately, the FARC has become just as terroristic as the right-wing paramilitary." Of the 2 million Colombians displaced by the war, about half are black, he said. Afro-Colombians were not granted collective titles to their ancestral lands until 1996 and these once-ignored regions now are coveted for their mineral and petroleum resources. "Afro-Colombians are treated as if we are invisible, although we are between 36 and 43 percent of Colombia's population," Murillo explained. Despite this, Afro-Colombians have had very little role in governing the country. For example, Murillo noted, there has never been an Afro- Colombian Cabinet minister. That neglect has helped create the humanitarian crisis that now occupies his time. Among other things, the story of the Afro-Colombians is another example of the war on drug's racist effects; just as African-Americans have suffered the war's greatest collateral damage in the U.S., so have Afro-Colombians. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom