In mid-May, shortly after being confirmed to lead the White House
Office on National Drug Control Policy, Gil Kerlikowski offered the
latest hint that the Obama Administration might take a new approach to
counternarcotics.
by Adam Isacson, Center for International Policyon May 21, 2009
The Obama administration’s State Department has released a “Summary and Highlights” document for its 2010 foreign assistance request, which offers some significant clues about where future aid is headed.
by Travis Wheeler and Lisa Haugaardon March 26, 2009
Speaking to reporters after a local “security council” meeting in Norte
de Santander earlier this week, President Uribe claimed that only 22 of
the many hundreds of cases of “false positives” civilian killings by
the Colombian army in recent years have any “judicial foundation.”
When we started working with faith-based and grassroots groups to
plan this year's Days of Prayer and Action, Colombians were being
forced to flee their homes at the staggering, almost unbelievable rate
of 1,500 a day. By the time 2008 was said and done, nearly 400,000 had
become internally displaced people (IDPs) and Colombia's displaced
population had swelled to more than 4 million, overtaking Sudan in the
seeming-blink-of-an-eye as the country with the world's most displaced
people. We knew we had to do something to make this crisis visible to
people here in the United State and to our government that has funded
and supported so many of the policies that have exacerbated this
humanitarian crisis.
Here's a guest blog from LAWG colleague Adam Isacson at the Center for International Policy on the debate surrounding Colombia's victims' law. Colombia needs a strong, fair law on victims rights and meaningful reparations.
by Travis Wheeler and Lisa Haugaardon April 07, 2009
While many of our readers know that Colombian human rights defenders
are frequently targeted and stigmatized by public threats and innuendo
that call the very legitimacy of their work—and sometimes their
personal integrity—into question, what’s less well understood is how
often the voices of those denouncing human rights abuses are stifled by
baseless investigations and prosecutions.
by Travis Wheeler and Lisa Haugaardon March 03, 2009
Last week, Colombian Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos visited Washington, DC to meet with lawmakers and top Obama Administration officials, including Sec. of State Hillary Clinton, Defense Sec. Robert Gates, and National Security Adviser Gen. James Jones.