State
Department Fact Sheet: Human Rights and U.S. Support of Plan Colombia,
February 2001
United
States Support For Colombia
Fact Sheet released by the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs
February, 2001
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Plan Colombia and Human Rights
A central goal of U.S. assistance to Colombia is to promote and protect
human rights.
In accordance with
U.S. law, as embodied in the Leahy Amendment, all assistance to the Colombian
armed forces is contingent upon human rights screening. No assistance
will be provided to any unit of the Colombian military for which there
is credible evidence of serious human rights violations by its members,
unless, as required by U.S. law, the Secretary of State determines that
Bogota is taking steps to bring those responsible for human rights violations
to justice.
What distinguishes
the situation today from past years is the commitment of the Pastrana
administration to improving Colombia's human rights record. The Colombian
military is undergoing a cultural transformation that, if sustained, bodes
well for Colombia. Dramatic steps have been taken to deal with the legacy
of human rights abuses and impunity for violators.
President Pastrana
recognizes that he needs to do more to address this problem. This is one
of the clear motivations for his "Plan Colombia" -- and for
our $1.3 billion assistance package. We are committed to help the Colombian
administration address the conditions that breed human rights abuses,
whether by paramilitaries, guerillas, drug traffickers, or elements of
the security forces.
In August 2000, the
U.S. Government announced its certification of one of the seven Colombia
supplemental conditions and the waiver of the remaining six. In January
2001, the Executive Branch transmitted to Congress a voluntary report
on the Human Rights situation in Colombia.
U.S. assistance will
fund training and support for human rights non-governmental organizations
as well as government investigators and prosecutors, including a specialized
human rights task force. Working with the Colombian Vice President's office,
the U.S. is promoting and assisting the development of a national human
rights policy. The U.S. is providing human rights-related training for
security force members and judges and assistance to the human rights ombudsman.
The U.S. also supports enhanced security protection for human rights monitors
in Colombia.
President Pastrana
has stated repeatedly that he will not tolerate collaboration, by commission
or omission, between security force members and paramilitaries. He has
backed this up with direct action, last year removing four generals and
numerous mid-level officers for having links to the paramilitaries or
failure to confront them aggressively. The forced retirements of Gens.
Milan and del Rio because of ties to paramilitary organizations and the
arrests of Gen. Uscategui and Lt. Col. Sanchez Oviedo for alleged involvement
in the 1997 Mapiripan
massacre conducted by paramilitaries are particularly significant.
The U.S. will continue
to press the Colombian Government to eliminate any remaining links between
security force members and the paramilitaries. On numerous occasions the
U.S. has called on the paramilitaries, the FARC guerrilla group, and the
ELN guerrilla group to respect international human rights norms and to
cease the practice of kidnapping.
U.S. support for
the Colombian peace process is in part premised on the principle that
a negotiated settlement is ultimately the best guarantee for human rights.
As of May 24, 2001,
this document was also available online at http://usinfo.state.gov/regional/ar/colombia/hrights01.htm