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International Seminar on Displacement: Implications and Challenges for Governance, Democracy and Peace

Francis M. Deng
Francis M. Deng Former Brookings Expert

September 4, 2002

BOGOTA – I would like to express my solidarity with the participants of this international seminar who are seeking to raise greater awareness to the plight of internally displaced persons in Colombia and to find effective and practical solutions for the problems that they face. Although I am unfortunately unable to be with you today in Bogota, allow me to commend the Consultancy on Human Rights and Displacement (CODHES) for organizing today’s seminar. Over the years CODHES has made a valuable contribution to the international community’s understanding of the situation of internal displacement in Colombia. It is my hope that today’s seminar, like its predecessor in 2000, will promote greater understanding of the situation of internal displacement in Colombia and point the way toward more effective solutions.

At today’s seminar, CODHES has disseminated the Spanish translation of the United Nations Handbook for Applying the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement. The Principles, as you know, are the first international standards for internally displaced persons. Prepared at the request of the UN Commission on Human Rights and the General Assembly and presented by the Representative of the UN Secretary-General on Internally Displaced Persons to the Commission in 1998, they set forth the rights of internally displaced persons and the obligations of governments and other controlling actors toward these populations. The Principles extend to all phases of displacement, covering protection from arbitrary displacement, protection and assistance during displacement and during return or resettlement and reintegration. The Handbook which was developed to implement the Principles in the field was first published in English in 1999 by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the Brookings Institution Project on Internal Displacement. It provides practical guidance to field staff on the actual steps they can take on behalf of displaced persons to carry out the Principles.

I very much hope that the Spanish edition will serve to support the work of international and national organizations working on behalf of the displaced and will reinforce efforts of displaced communities themselves. The Handbook should prove useful at this seminar as well as other workshops and at field staff training programs concerning internally displaced persons. Additional copies are available from my office. Please contact the Brookings Institution at [email protected].

Turning to the situation in Colombia, I am pleased to note that since my last visit to your country in 1999, the Government has taken a number of measures to address the problem of internal displacement. In particular, it has taken steps to further develop national legal and institutional frameworks. I am encouraged, for example, by the Government’s efforts to strengthen the implementation of existing legislation, specifically with Presidential Directive No. 6 (2001), which supports the Constitutional Court’s decision T-327 (March 2001) that upheld the Guiding Principles and stressed the need for Government officials to receive training in the Principles. It is also noteworthy that a prior Constitutional Court decision SU-1150 (August 2000) states that the Guiding Principles should be utilized in the interpretation of existing legislation for the internally displaced and as the standard for any new legislation on displacement. Furthermore, in the past year, the Red de Solidaridad Social has taken measures to try to improve its emergency humanitarian response.

While these developments are all noteworthy, there nonetheless continues to be a tremendous gap between the standards set forth in the Guiding Principles and Law 387 of 1997 and the reality on the ground. Sadly, early warning indicators have failed to prevent and protect persons from displacement. The number of internally displaced persons only continues to rise, with significant new displacement occurring on a frequent basis. With an estimated number of more than one million displaced, Colombia today has one of the highest internally displaced populations in the world.

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