Colombian human rights activists revealed on Thursday that over a quarter of a million people were displaced from their homes by guerilla and paramilitary violence in 2009.
Consultancy on Human Rights and Displacement president Jorge Rojas said that the country's internal conflict was exacerbated by the government's use of chemicals to destroy coca plantations (pictured) - also killing crops and forcing peasants.
Around 286,000 more people were added last year to the toll of 2.4 million people who have been displaced since Alvaro Uribe became president in 2002, when he launched his Democratic Security plan in order to further militarise the country.
Mr Rojas related that "at the core of the reasons for this forced displacement is the violent appropriation of land, and threats to leave that are issued by paramilitaries and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia."
Mr Rojas also pointed out that, although the number of Colombians leaving the country had declined, "Colombia is still the country with the highest number of refugees in the world after Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia and Sudan."
If you have enjoyed this article then please consider donating to the Morning Star's Fighting Fund to ensure we can keep publishing your paper.
Party political manoeuvring between the Greek social-democratic, conservative and fascist parties has delayed acceptance of the blackmail demands presented by the troika of European Union, International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank.
The growing intervention in Syrian internal affairs demonstrates the West's blatant attempt to rally reactionary Arab forces in support of its continued domination of the region, says George Galloway
Jacqui Smith's bizarre call to get schmoozing with the City