Pubdate: Mon, 10 May 2004 Source: Sarasota Herald-Tribune (FL) Contact: 2004 Sarasota Herald-Tribune Website: http://www.heraldtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/398 Author: Edith M. Lederer, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/colombia.htm (Colombia) U.N.: COLOMBIA IS HUMANITARIAN CATASTROPHE UNITED NATIONS -- The drug-fueled war in Colombia has created the worst humanitarian crisis in the Western hemisphere, with more than 2 million people displaced and Indian tribes threatened with extinction, the U.N. humanitarian chief said Monday. In the last four years, the number of people forced to flee their homes has increased by about 1 million, Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Jan Egeland said. Colombia now has the third-largest number of displaced people in the world - behind Congo and Sudan, he said. "Colombia is therefore by far the biggest humanitarian catastrophe of the Western hemisphere," Egeland told a news conference. It also has the most killing in the Western Hemisphere, and the longest war - waged for 39 years, he said. Colombia's war pits two leftist guerrilla groups against government forces and right-wing paramilitaries. At least 3,500 people, mainly civilians, die in the fighting every year. Egeland, a former U.N. special adviser in Colombia, recently spent four days visiting displaced people living in shantytowns outside Cartagena on the Atlantic coast and near Bogota. In the last year, the number of kidnappings and assassinations have gone down, but the "humanitarian situation is worsening" because poor Colombians are being attacked by armed groups and are forced to flee their homes, he said. "This leads to people going from the countryside to towns and cities where they stay in shantytowns" without access to education, health care or adequate shelter, he said. In the shantytown outside Cartagena, he said, "I just felt it was 10,000 people floating around in a sea of sewage and garbage." The humanitarian crisis and the war feed into a vicious cycle, Egeland said. The young among the millions displaced have "no hope, no education, no feeling of having a future" and become recruits for guerrillasparamilitary forces and drug gangs, he said. In 10 "besieged and blocked areas of the country," the fighting has trapped several hundred thousand Indian tribes and peasant communities, preventing them from receiving international assistance, he said. Several Indian tribes "are in acute danger of becoming extinct" because of persecution, forced recruitment by armed groups, and being forced from their land by "the coca mafia," Egeland said. Next month, the United Nations, the Colombian government and non-governmental organizations are launching a new "humanitarian plan of action" focusing on projects to help the internally displaced, Egeland said. The United Nations will then appeal for international funding. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin