Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Buried airplanes and land titles


I’ve written before about the land titling disputes that are so central to much of our accompaniment work here in Colombia.  I think, too, that it’s important to name it as not solely a Colombian problem.  When Julie and I bought our land in southern Ohio, the title had to be cleansed of a problem from the 1800s.  When we were in Guatemala, Mennonite Central Committee facilitated the purchase of a big piece of land for a group of returning refugees that turned out to have five separate titles registered at the courthouse.

Here in Colombia a large tract of land in the Magdelena River valley that was part of a government railroad project was divided up between a small group of business families in 1921. Manuel Enrique Barreto’s grandfather was one of those.  Agreements were signed, but no deeds were ever registered.  The land was essentially vacant until the 1970’s when peasant farmers began to move into the area and clear small parcels for their families. 

Barreto himself arrived in the early 1980s to start a ranch claiming he owned all the land in the area.  Turned out he didn’t want to develop a cattle ranch so much as an airstrip and a cocaine processing lab.  He and his paramilitary supporters told their neighbors they could stay on their farms as long as they kept quiet about it.  Some of the neighbors actually worked for Barreto as carpenters and ag laborers, and some were present when Pablo Escobar, the renowned drug lord showed up for a visit.

Since that time there have been two decades of threats, murders, and court cases over who actually has legal right to the properties, with the federal court siding with the campesinos a few years back.  The actual delivery of titles has yet to happen.  That’s why we keep coming back here.


Fast forward to a big windstorm that knocked down a great number of big trees in the area in late August last year.  One of those trees fell in a jungle area a hundred yards or so from some open pasture and not far from where you can make out the drainage ditch that ran alongside Barreto’s airstrip.  It wasn’t until January this year that someone happened to be walking through that overgrown area and noticed a metal tube sticking out of the bottom of the uprooted stump.  Then they noticed other pieces of metal in the ground.  It was a small airplane, buried.

I have to insert here that as a guy who thinks he knows a lot about trees, I am astonished at how fast trees grow in this kind of ecosystem.  The tree that fell is roughly two feet in diameter.  A tree that size in in the US Midwest would be a maybe a hundred to a hundred-twenty years old.  Here, more like thirty.



In my previous post I was referring to what happened next.  News of the plane was not shared openly, but on March 1, the day I arrived in Barranca, four men were discovered working at digging up the plane at the behest of someone they called El Patron with the intent of removing it.  They were told to stop by the community and calls were made to various authorities and to us as a group who has provided security for this community for many years.  Two of us arrived on March 3 and visited the burial site with several community members.  The government had brought in a platoon of soldiers by helicopter to secure the site the previous afternoon.  Other contacts told us that a federal crime scene investigation team would be arriving the next week.  We took lots of photos for evidence, in case the team of investigators didn’t show up.  On our second day at the site there was a journalist from a Colombian news channel who showed up.  Subsequently, both he and the army have published articles naming the plane as linked to narcotrafficking.


As of this writing, more than two weeks later the investigation team has not showed up.  The soldiers also left after about a week, but there has been relatively open communication between the army’s commanding officer and the community contacts.  We are hopeful that if El Patron’s crew returns, the army would be back quickly also.  Additionally, the UN Human Rights Commission in Bogota contacted community leaders just yesterday to say they have assurances at the federal level that the site will be investigated, too.


For the community, this airplane brings back painful memories and a fear that this El Patron character is someone connected with the narcotrafficking history of the area, and who wants to keep this piece of evidence out of federal hands.  Community members fear they will be blamed for making this a public.  We are paying special attention to this fear and trying to be as present and supportive as possible.

Friday, March 9, 2018

Aluminum on the jungle floor


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Let’s review.  I have been spending a month or so in Colombia working with Christian Peacemaker Teams for ten years in a row now.  We are “unarmed body guards” whose presence alongside people whose lives are disrupted by threats of violence helps to lower that threat.  Our office is in the oil town of Barrancabermeja.  We work primarily in the agricultural region north of the city along the River Magdalena or up in the foothills of the mountains with mining communities.

I arrived a week ago.  The trip down was amazing for the networking accidentally accomplished. It  began when I met a man from Guatemala City after we both got off the flight from Columbus and ended up having lunch together.  Then I spent nearly an hour weaving through the customs line in Bogota chatting with a man who was being sent down to the US embassy to work for four months in the USAID office.  Later that night I found a safe, comfortable bench to spend six hours snoozing as I waited for my 6 AM flight to Barranca.  A couple about my age sat down next to me.  I did some visual stereo-typing and decided to identify myself to them as a member of the Mennonite Church.  So were they.  They had worked in Costa Rica in the 1970s, and, of course, after playing the Mennonite game for a while, we identified some relationships we had in common.  They were down to consult on a Bible translation project for indigenous people here in Colombia.  We spent the night together there in the waiting area, sleeping badly. 


After getting to Barranca, this first week has turned out to be one of the most interesting and complicated since I started coming in 2008.  At this point, I can’t tell you exactly where we are working.  The specific incident involves small farms, jungle, buried two-person airplanes, the army, the national human rights office, and narco traffickers.  Ironically, I watched the Tom Cruise movie “American Made” on my flight to Bogota, and while it is factually mushy in several areas, the hidden, rural airstrip depicted on Cruise’s first run to Colombia is exactly what I am talking about.  The abandoned airstrip we are actually dealing with here hasn’t been used in 30 years and was controlled by Pablo Escobar’s branch of the Colombian drug cartel.  The discovery of these planes has triggered an attempt by someone to remove the evidence.  


Add to this the fact that this Sunday Colombia holds its Senate elections.  In Barranca, a city where literally half the people travel by motorcycle, sometimes a family of four on one bike, and motorcycle taxis are common, things change on election day when only one person is allowed on a motorcycle from 6 AM to 6 PM.  Alcohol sales will stop on Saturday night and resume again on Monday.  It’s going to be a very interesting weekend. 


This picture of me with Pepo the goat is posted for my goat farmer friends, Ivan and Nina. He wanted his ears scratched as much as any dog I have ever known.