Afro-Colombian Social Leader Assassinated Days After 7 Campesinos Killed | Land Portal

The community council in the area has repeatedly denounced human rights violations against the Afro-Colombian, Mestizo and Indigenous peasants in the region.

A Colombian social leader, Jose Jair Cortes, was murdered in a rural area of Tumaco municipality located in the southwest department of Narino. 

Jair Cortes, a member of the local council of the Alto Mira and Frontera Community, was killed in a sector called Y, located in the heart of the city of Tumaco. The social leader was one of seven community leaders to receive death threats in recent months. 

The governor of Narino, Camilo Romero Galeano, denounced the murder that occurred just days after a massacre that left seven people dead in the village of El Tandil, in the same municipality.

The state government has urged the authorities to investigate the exact details of the community leader's murder.

"We have once again resisted accepting that the war will continue to make its mark on the Narino pacific," Romero said. "Our voice of solidarity for the family of Jose Jair Cortes in this painful moment that keeps the mourning in our south."

"We are profoundly affected by this death, just days after we met in Tumaco with him and the other members of this Junta de Gobierno, corresponding to the territory where the painful events that six peasants and dozens of wounded and still remain of research," the official statement said.

The community council in the area has repeatedly denounced human rights violations against the Afro-Colombian, Mestizo and Indigenous peasants in the region. The campesinos in the area have been protesting against government's plan to reduce the production of Cocoa crop, an important means of livelihood for many in the region.

In the western department of Cauca, over  40 campesinos have been injured and one journalist killed in clashes between the Indigenous community members and the Colombian police. 

The Indigenous community members who began their protests 10 days ago are demanding the property in the Coconuco Indigenous Reservation, a rural area of Purace municipality, where the government had promised them land in 2013. 

The Mobile Anti-Riot Squads (ESMAD) accused the natives of encroaching private property. ESMAD member, Capt. Edgar Garcia, told Caracol, a local radio station that the natives threw "immense rocks that destroy sticks and all around, equally, they shoot us with artifacts, stones, bottles, and explosives to intimidate us, while we are defending the private property."

Whereas, a spokesman for the protesters quoted by the local radio station, said that "about 10 ESMAD trucks, two tanks and all the artifacts against the indigenous peoples, entered the community."

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