OEA/Ser.L/V/II.
Doc. 67
18 October 2006
Original: Spanish
VIOLENCE AND DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
IN THE ARMED CONFLICT IN COLOMBIA
VIOLENCE AND
DISCRIMINATION
AGAINST WOMEN IN THE ARMED
CONFLICT IN COLOMBIA
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
I.
INTRODUCTION
A. The on-site visit to Colombia on June of 2005
B. Legal framework of the report: international norms and
standards applicable to discrimination and violence against women
II.
THE ARMED CONFLICT IN COLOMBIA AND ITS IMPACT ON WOMEN
A.
Characteristics of the Colombian armed conflict
B.
Dynamics of the armed conflict that particularly affect women in
Colombia
III.
MANIFESTATIONS OF VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN AGGRAVATED BY THE ARMED
CONFLICT
A. Non-combatant women – daughters, sisters, mothers, partners, and wives
of combatants – as direct targets or collateral victims of physical,
psychological and sexual violence
1. The effects and
consequences of violence against women on the victims
2. Violence in figures
B. Forced displacement, the humanitarian crisis and women heads of
household
C. Forced and voluntary recruitment of women and girls
D. The imposition of rules of conduct over women and girls
IV.
MULTIPLE DISCRIMINATION AGAINST AFRO-COLOMBIAN AND INDIGENOUS WOMEN
A. Afro-Colombian Women
B. Indigenous Women
1. Indigenous women
and their ancestral lands
2. Indigenous women,
armed conflict and sexual violence
3. Conclusion
V.
THE RESPONSE OF THE COLOMBIAN STATE TO THE IMPACT OF THE ARMED
CONFLICT ON WOMEN
A. Advances in the development of a legislative and public policy
framework, and State programs to protect the rights of women
B. Absence of an integral State policy and of coordinated and
multi-disciplinary services and programs to address the specific
impact of the armed conflict on women
C. Flaws in the diagnosis and prevention of the consequences of the armed
conflict on women
D. Homogenous perspective and view of women as a target group benefiting
from State protection and services destined to mitigate the impact of
the armed conflict on them
E. Gaps in the humanitarian assistance and support services for victims: response to forced displacement
F. Obstacles to access justice
1. Deficiencies in the
legal framework
2. Persistence of
discriminatory socio-cultural patterns
3. Deficiencies in the
investigation, judgment and sanction of acts of violence and
discrimination on the basis of gender and in the creation of safe
conditions for the reporting of crimes
G. The need to protect and legitimize the work of women’s rights
defenders
H. Perspectives of truth, justice and reparation
VI.
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
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