Country facts:
| Flag: |
 |
| Area: |
1,138,910 sq km |
| Population: |
42,954,279 |
| Languages: |
Spanish |
| Currency: |
Colombian peso (COP) |
| Climate: |
tropical along coast and eastern plains; cooler in highlands |
Colombia
Colombia country information
Geography
Colombia is bordered on the northwest by Panama, on the east by
Venezuela and Brazil, and on the southwest by Peru and Ecuador. Through
the western half of the country, three Andean ranges run north and
south. The eastern half is a low, jungle-covered plain, drained by
spurs of the Amazon and Orinoco Rivers, inhabited mostly by isolated
tropical-forest Indian tribes. The fertile plateau and valley of the
eastern range are the most densely populated parts of the country.
Government
Republic.
History
Little is known about the various Indian tribes who inhabited Colombia
before the Spanish arrived. In 1510 Spaniards founded Darien, the first
permanent European settlement on the American mainland. In 1538 they
established the colony of New Granada, the area's name until 1861.
After a 14-year struggle, during which time Simón Bolívar's Venezuelan
troops won the battle of Boyacá in Colombia on Aug. 7, 1819,
independence was attained in 1824. Bolívar united Colombia, Venezuela,
Panama, and Ecuador in the Republic of Greater Colombia (1819?1830),
but he lost Venezuela and Ecuador to separatists. Two political parties
dominated the region: the Conservatives believed in a strong central
government and a powerful church; the Liberals believed in a
decentralized government, strong regional power, and a less influential
role for the church. Bolívar was himself a Conservative, while his vice
president, Francisco de Paula Santander, was the founder of the Liberal
Party.
Santander served as president between 1832 and 1836, a period of
relative stability, but by 1840 civil war erupted. Other periods of
Liberal dominance (1849?1857 and 1861?1880), which sought to
disestablish the Roman Catholic Church, were marked by insurrection.
Nine different governments followed, each rewriting the constitution.
In 1861 the country was called the United States of New Granada; in
1863 it became the United States of Colombia; and in 1885, it was named
the Republic of Colombia. In 1899 a brutal civil war broke out, the War
of a Thousand Days, that lasted until 1902. The following year,
Colombia lost its claims to Panama because it refused to ratify the
lease to the U.S. of the Canal Zone. Panama declared its independence
in 1903.
The Conservatives held power until 1930, when revolutionary pressure
put the Liberals back in power. The Liberal administrations of Enrique
Olaya Herrera and Alfonso López (1930?1938) were marked by social
reforms that failed to solve the country's problems, and in 1946, a
period of insurrection and banditry broke out, referred to as La
Violencia, which claimed hundreds of thousands of lives by 1958.
Laureano Gómez (1950?1953); the army chief of staff, Gen. Gustavo Rojas
Pinilla (1953?1956); and a military junta (1956?1957) sought to curb
disorder by repression.
Marxist guerrilla groups organized in the 1960s and 1970s, most notably
the May 19th Movement (M-19), the National Liberation Army (ELN), and
the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), plunging the country
into violence and instability. In the 1970s and 1980s, Colombia became
one of the international centers for illegal drug production and
trafficking, and at times the drug cartels (the Medillin and Cali
cartels were the most notorious) virtually controlled the country.
Colombia provides 75% of the world's illegal cocaine. In the 1990s,
numerous right-wing paramilitary groups also formed, made up of drug
traffickers and landowners. The umbrella group for these paramilitaries
is the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC). Belisario Betancur
Cuartas, a Conservative who assumed the presidency in 1982,
unsuccessfully attempted to stem the guerrilla violence. In an official
war against drug trafficking, Colombia became a public battleground
with bombs, killings, and kidnappings. By 1989, homicide had become the
leading cause of death in the nation. Elected president in 1990, César
Gaviria Trujillo proposed lenient punishment in exchange for surrender
by the leading drug dealers. Ernesto Samper of the Liberal Party became
president in 1994. In 1996 he was accused of accepting campaign
contributions from drug traffickers, but the House of Representatives
absolved him of the charges.
Andrés Pastrana Arango was elected president in 1998, pledging to clean
up corruption. In Dec. 1999 the Colombian military reported that 2,787
people were kidnapped that year?the largest number in the world?and
blamed rebels. The murder rate soared in 1999, with some 23,000 people
reported killed by leftist guerrillas, right-wing paramilitaries, drug
traffickers, and common criminals. The violence has created more than
100,000 refugees, while 2 million Colombians have fled the country in
recent years.
In Aug. 2000, the U.S. government approved ?Plan Colombia,? pledging
$1.3 billion to fight drug trafficking. Pastrana used the plan to
undercut drug production and prevent guerrilla groups from benefiting
from drug sales. In Aug. 2001, Pastrana signed ?war legislation,? which
expanded the rights of the military in dealing with rebels.
Alvaro Uribe of the Liberal Party easily won the presidential election
in May 2002. He took office in August, pledging to get tough on the
rebels and drug traffickers by increasing military spending and seeking
U.S. military cooperation. An upsurge in violence accompanied his
inauguration, and Uribe declared a state of emergency within a week. In
his first year, Uribe beefed up Colombia's security forces with the
help of U.S. special forces, launched an aggressive campaign against
the drug trade, and passed several economic reform bills.
In May 2004, the UN announced that Colombia's 39-year-long drug war had
created the worst humanitarian crisis in the Western Hemisphere. More
than 2 million people have been forced to leave their homes and several
Indian tribes are close to extinction. Colombia now has the
third-largest displaced population in the world, with only Sudan and
the Congo having more. Uribe has produced some impressive results in
fixing his country's ills, however. According to his defense minister,
during 2003 more than 16,000 suspected leftist guerrillas and
right-wing paramilitary vigilantes either surrendered, were
apprehended, or were killed. Since 2003, the right-wing paramilitary
group AUC has been involved in peace talks with the government, but
despite demobilizing 4,000 troops, the vigilante group seemed as
vigorous as ever in 2005. Although the two other major armed groups,
left-wing FARC and ELN, continue to finance themselves through
kidnapping and drug trafficking, governmental efforts have been
successful in significantly reducing the kidnapping rate.
By 2006, the United States had invested $4 billion into Plan Colombia,
the joint U.S.-Colombia coca antinarcotics plan begun in 2000. While
officials say the program has eradicated more than a million acres of
coca plants, Colombian drug traffickers are still managing to supply
90% of the cocaine used in the U.S. and 50% of the heroin?the same
percentages supplied five years ago, when the program began. In 2006, a
U.S. government survey acknowledged that coca production in the country
had in fact increased by 26%, and that aerial spraying of the illegal
crops?the primary strategy of Plan Colombia?was failing.