Difference between revisions of "Colombia" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Claimed for Vicki Phelps by Mary Anglin. Thanks!'''
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{{Infobox Country
 
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| native_name              = {{lang|es|República de Colombia}}
{{Infobox Country or territory
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| conventional_long_name  = Republic of Colombia
|native_name              = ''República de Colombia''
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| common_name              = Colombia
|conventional_long_name  = Republic of Colombia
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| image_flag              = Flag of Colombia.svg
|common_name              = Colombia
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| image_coat              = Coat of arms of Colombia.svg‎
|image_flag              = Flag of Colombia.svg
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| image_map                = LocationColombia.svg
|image_coat              = Coat of arms of Colombia.svg
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| national_motto          = ''"Libertad y Orden"''{{Spaces|2}}<small>{{es icon}}</small><br />''"Freedom and Order"''
|image_map                = LocationColombia.svg
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| national_anthem          = ''{{lang|es|[[National Anthem of Colombia|¡Oh, Gloria Inmarcesible!]]}}''{{Spaces|2}}<small>{{es icon}}<br />O unfading glory!</small>
|national_motto          = ''"Libertad y Orden"''{{spaces|2}}<small>([[Spanish language|Spanish]])<br/>"Liberty and Order"</small>
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| capital                  = [[Bogotá]]
|national_anthem          = ''[[National Anthem of Colombia|Oh, Gloria Inmarcesible!]]''
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| latd                     = 4|latm=39|latNS=N|longd=74|longm=3|longEW=W
|official_languages      = [[Spanish language|Spanish]]
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| largest_city            = capital
|capital                  = [[Bogotá]]
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| official_languages      = [[Spanish language|Spanish]]{{Smallsup|1}}
|latd=4 |latm=39 |latNS=N |longd=74 |longm=3 |longEW=W
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| national_languages      = ([[English language|English]] is also official in San Andrés and Providence islands)
|largest_city            = capital
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| regional_languages      = The 72 languages and dialects of ethnic groups are also official in their regions.<ref name="constitution">[http://pdba.georgetown.edu/Constitutions/Colombia/col91.html Constitution of Colombia, 1991] (Article 10) Retrieved August 10,2022. {{es icon}}</ref>
|government_type         = [[Republic]]
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| ethnic_groups            = 87.6% [[White people|White]] or [[Mestizo Colombians|Mestizo]] <br />6.8% [[Afro-Colombians]] (includes Mulatto, Raizal, and Palenquero)<br />4.3% [[Indigenous peoples in Colombia|Amerindian]]<br />1.4% Unspecified<ref name="CIAWFB">Central Intelligence Agency, [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/colombia/ Colombia] ''The World Factbook''. Retrieved August 10, 2022.</ref>
|leader_title1           = [[List of Presidents of Colombia|President]]
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| demonym                  = Colombian
|leader_name1             = [[Álvaro Uribe|Álvaro Uribe Velez]]
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| government_type       = [[Unitary state|Unitary]] [[Presidential system|presidential]] [[republic]]
|sovereignty_type        = [[Independence]]
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| leader_title1         = [[President of Colombia|President]]
|sovereignty_note        = from [[Spain]]
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| leader_name1           = [[Gustavo Petro]]
|established_event1      = Declared
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| leader_title2          = [[Vice President of Colombia|Vice President]]
|established_date1        = [[July 20]] [[1810]]
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| leader_name2          = [[Francia Márquez]] 
|established_event2      = Recognised
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| sovereignty_type        = [[Independence]]
|established_date2        = [[August 7]] [[1819]]
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| sovereignty_note        = from [[Spain]]
|area_rank                = 26th
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| established_event1      = [[Colombian Declaration of Independence|Declared]]
|area_magnitude          = 1 E12
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| established_date1        = July 20, 1810
|area                    = 1,141,748
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| established_event2      = Recognized
|areami²                  = 440,839 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
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| established_date2        = August 7, 1819
|percent_water            = 8.8
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| established_event3      = [[Colombian Constitution|Current constitution]]
|population_estimate      = 45,600,000 <!--UN WPP—>
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| established_date3        = 1991
|population_estimate_rank = 28th
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| area_rank                = 26th
|population_estimate_year = July 2005
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| area_magnitude          = 1 E12
|population_census        = 42,888,592
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| area_km2                = 1,141,748
|population_census_year  = 2005
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| area_sq_mi              = 440,831 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
|population_density      = 40
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| percent_water            = 8.8 (17th)
|population_densitymi²    = 104 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]>
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| population_estimate      = 50,355,650<ref name="CIAWFB"/>
|population_density_rank  = 161st
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| population_estimate_year                = 2021
|GNI_per_capita          = $2,020
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| population_estimate_rank                = 29th
|GNI_per_capita          = 123rd <!--WorldBank List—>
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| population_density_km2                = 42.23
|GDP_PPP                  = $337.286 billion
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| population_density_rank                = 173rd
|GDP_PPP_rank             = 29th
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| population_density_sq_mi                = 105.72
|GDP_PPP_year            = 2005 <!--IMF—>
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| GDP_PPP                = {{increase}}$940.589&nbsp;billion<ref name=imf2>[https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/weo-database/2022/April/weo-report?c=233,&s=NGDPD,PPPGDP,NGDPDPC,PPPPC,&sy=2022&ey=2027&ssm=0&scsm=1&scc=0&ssd=1&ssc=0&sic=0&sort=country&ds=.&br=1 World Economic Outlook Database: Colombia] ''International Monetary Fund'', April 2022. Retrieved August 10, 2022.</ref>
|GDP_PPP_per_capita       = $7,565
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| GDP_PPP_year          = 2022
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 81st
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| GDP_PPP_rank           = 32nd
|Gini                    = 58.6
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita     = {{increase}}$18,225<ref name=imf2/>
|Gini_year                = 2003
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 84th
|Gini_category            = <font color="#e0584e">high</font>
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| GDP_nominal            = {{increase}}$351.281&nbsp;billion<ref name=imf2/>
|HDI                      = {{increase}} 0.790
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| GDP_nominal_year      = 2022
|HDI_rank                = 70th
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| GDP_nominal_rank      = 43rd
|HDI_year                = 2004
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| GDP_nominal_per_capita = {{increase}}$6,806<ref name=imf2/>
|HDI_category            = <font color="#ffcc00">medium</font>
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| GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = 97th
|HPI                      = 67.2
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| Gini                  = 54.2<ref>[https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SI.POV.GINI?locations=CO GINI index – Colombia] ''World Bank''. Retrieved August 10, 2022. </ref> <!--number only—>
|HPI_rank                = 2nd
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| Gini_year              = 2020
|HPI_year                = 2006
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| Gini_change            = increase <!--increase/decrease/steady—>
|HPI_category            = <font color="#ffcc00">high</font>
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| Gini_ref              =  
|currency                 = [[Colombian peso|Peso]]
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| currency       = [[Colombian peso|Peso]]
|currency_code           = COP
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| currency_code = COP
|country_code             =  
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| country_code   = CO
|time_zone               =  
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| time_zone     =  
|utc_offset               = -5
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| utc_offset     = -5{{Smallsup|2}}
|time_zone_DST           =  
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| time_zone_DST =  
|utc_offset_DST           =  
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| utc_offset_DST =  
|cctld                   = [[.co]]
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| drives_on      = Right
|calling_code             = 57
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| date_format    = dd-mm-yyyy ([[Common Era|CE]])
|demonym                  = Colombian
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| cctld         = [[.co]]
|Happy Planet Index      = 2 (by 2007)
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| calling_code   = [[+57]]
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| footnote1      = Although the Colombian Constitution specifies Spanish as the official language in all its territory, the native languages (approximately 88 dialects) are also official in the whole country.
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| footnote2      = The official Colombian time, is controlled and coordinated by the state agency [[Superintendency of Industry and Commerce]].<ref>[http://horalegal.inm.gov.co/ La Hora Legal Para Colombia] ''Instituto Nacional de Metrología''. Retrieved August 10, 2022.</ref>
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Colombia''' ([[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]]: {{IPA|/kəˈlʌm.bɪ.ə/}}) officially the '''Republic of Colombia''' ({{Audio-es|República de Colombia|República de Colombia.ogg}}, {{IPA2|reˈpuβ̞lika ð̞e koˈlombja}}), is a country located in the northwestern region of [[South America]]. Colombia is bordered to the east by [[Venezuela]] and [[Brazil]]; to the south by [[Ecuador]] and [[Peru]]; to the North by the [[Atlantic Ocean]], through the [[Caribbean Sea]]; and to the west by [[Panama]] and the [[Pacific Ocean]]. Besides the countries in South America, the Republic of Colombia is recognized to share maritime borders with the [[Caribbean]] countries of [[Jamaica]], [[Haiti]], the [[Dominican Republic]] and the [[Central American]] countries of [[Honduras]], [[Nicaragua]], [[Costa Rica]].<ref>{{es icon}} [http://www.armada.mil.co/index.php?idcategoria=17895 Tratados Internacionales limítrofes de Colombia]</ref><ref>{{es icon}} [http://pwp.supercabletv.net.co/garcru/colombia/Colombia/mapaAstronomica.html#seccion1 Colombia - Limites territoriales]</ref>
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'''Colombia,''' officially the '''Republic of Colombia,''' is a country located in the northwestern region of [[South America]]. It is bordered to the east by [[Venezuela]] and [[Brazil]], to the south by [[Ecuador]] and [[Peru]], to the north by the [[Atlantic Ocean]] (through the [[Caribbean Sea]]), and to the west by [[Panama]] and the [[Pacific Ocean]]. It is the only South American country with both Atlantic and Pacific coasts.
  
Colombia is the [[List of countries and outlying territories by total area|26th largest nation]] in the world and the fourth-largest country in South America (after [[Brazil]], [[Argentina]], and [[Peru]]), with an area more than twice that of [[France]].  
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Colombia is the 26th largest nation in the world and the fourth-largest country in South America (after [[Brazil]], [[Argentina]], and [[Peru]]), with an area more than twice that of [[France]].  
  
The country currently suffers from a [[Colombian Armed Conflict (1960s–present)|low-intensity conflict]] involving rebel [[Guerrilla warfare|guerrilla]] groups, paramilitary militias, [[Illegal drug trade|drug trafficking]] and corruption. The conflict originated around 1964-1966, when the [[Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia]] (FARC) and the [[National Liberation Army (Colombia)|National Liberation Army]] (ELN) were founded and began their guerrilla insurgency campaigns against successive Colombian government administrations.  
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The country suffers from low-intensity conflicts involving rebel [[Guerrilla warfare|guerrilla]] groups, paramilitary militias, drug traffickers, and [[corruption]]. The conflict originated around 1964-1966, when the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the National Liberation Army (ELN) were founded and began their guerrilla insurgency campaigns against successive Colombian government administrations.  
  
==Etymology==
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The word "Colombia" comes from the name of [[Christopher Columbus]] (''Cristóbal Colón'' in Spanish, ''Cristoforo Colombo'' in Italian). Originally a reference to the New World, especially to all American territories and colonies under [[Spain|Spanish]] and [[Portugal|Portuguese]] rule, the name was adopted by the Republic of Colombia of 1819 formed by the union of Venezuela, New Granada, and Ecuador.
The word "Colombia" comes from the name of [[Christopher Columbus]] (''Cristóbal Colón'' in Spanish, ''Cristoforo Colombo'' in Italian). It was conceived by the revolutionary [[Francisco de Miranda]] as a reference to the New World, especially to all [[the Americas|American]] territories and colonies under [[Spain|Spanish]] and [[Portugal|Portuguese]] rule. The name was then adopted by the [[Greater Colombia|Republic of Colombia of 1819]] formed by the union of Venezuela, New Granada and Ecuador.
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{{toc}}
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In 1830, when [[Venezuela]] and [[Ecuador]] separated, the region that remained became a new country: The Republic of New Granada. In 1863 New Granada changed its name to United States of Colombia, and in 1886 adopted its present name: Republic of Colombia.
  
In 1830, when [[Venezuela]] and [[Ecuador]] separated, the [[Cundinamarca]] region that remained became a new country: the [[Republic of New Granada]]. In 1863 New Granada changed its name officially to [[United States of Colombia]], and in 1886 adopted its present day name: Republic of Colombia.
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==Geography==
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[[Image:Flower in Colombia.jpg|thumb|300px|Beauty in a Colombian flower.]]
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Colombia has more physical diversity packed into its borders than any other area of comparable size in [[Latin America]]. The country is part of the [[Pacific Ring of Fire]], a region of the world characterized by frequent [[earthquake]]s and [[volcano|volcanic]] eruptions.  
  
==History==
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Colombian surface features form complicated patterns. The western third of the country is the most complex. Starting at the shore of the [[Pacific Ocean]] in the west and moving eastward, a diverse sequence of features is encountered. In the extreme west are the very narrow and discontinuous Pacific coastal lowlands, which are backed by the Serranía de Baudó, the lowest and narrowest of Colombia's mountain ranges. Next is the broad region of the Río Atrato/Río San Juan lowland, which has been proposed as a possible alternate to the [[Panama Canal]] as a man-made route between the [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] and Pacific Oceans.
{{main|History of Colombia|Timeline of Colombian history}}
 
  
===Pre-Columbian Era===<!--DO NOT CHANGE TO PRE-COLOMBIA, COLUMBIA is the English language usage—>
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The chief western mountain range, the Cordillera Occidental, is a moderately high range with peaks reaching up to about 13,000&nbsp;ft (4,000&nbsp;m). The Cauca River Valley, an important [[agriculture|agricultural]] region with several large cities on its borders, separates the Cordillera Occidental from the massive Cordillera Central. Several [[snow]]-clad [[volcano]]es in the Cordillera Central have summits that rise above 18,000&nbsp;ft (5,500&nbsp;m). The valley of the slow-flowing and muddy Magdalena River, a major transportation artery, separates the Cordillera Central from the main eastern range, the Cordillera Oriental. The peaks of the Cordillera Oriental are moderately high. This range differs from Colombia's other mountain ranges in that it contains several large basins. In the east, the sparsely populated, flat to gently rolling eastern lowlands called ''llanos'' cover almost 60 percent of the country's total land area.
[[Image:Muisca raft Legend of El Dorado Offerings of gold.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The [[Zipa]] used to cover his body in gold and, from his raft, he offered treasures to the ''Guatavita'' goddess in the middle of the sacred lake. This old Muisca tradition became the origin of [[El Dorado]] legend.]]
 
[[Circa]] [[10000 B.C.E.]], [[hunter-gatherer]] societies existed near present-day Bogotá (at "[[El Abra]]" and "Tequendama") which traded with one another and with cultures living in the [[Magdalena River]] Valley.<ref>Van der Hammen, T. and Correal, G. 1978: "Prehistoric man on the Sabana de Bogota: data for an ecologiacal prehistory"; Paleography, Paleoclimatology, Paleoecology 25:179-190</ref> Beginning in the first millennium B.C.E., groups of [[Amerindian]]s developed the political system of "[[cacicazgo]]s" with a pyramidal structure of power headed by [[Cacique Nutibara Bloc|cacique]]s. Within Colombia, the two cultures with the most complex cacicazgo systems were the [[Tayrona]]s in the [[Caribbean Region]], and the [[Muisca]]s in the highlands around [[Bogotá]], both of which were of the [[Chibcha]] language family. The Muisca people are considered to have had one of the most developed political systems in South America, after the [[Inca]]s.<ref>Broadbent, Sylvia 1964: Los Chibchas: organización socio-política. Série Latinoamericana 5. Bogotá: Facultad de Sociología, Universidad Nacional de Colombia</ref>
 
  
===Colonial Era===
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This cross section of the republic does not include two of Colombia's regions: the Caribbean coastal lowlands and the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, both in the northern part of the country. The lowlands in the west are mostly swampy; the reed-filled marshes of the area are called ''ciénagas.'' The Guajira Peninsula in the east is semiarid. The Sierra Nevada is a spectacular triangular snowcapped block of rock that towers over the eastern part of this lowland.
  
[[Spain|Spanish]] explorers made the first exploration of the [[Caribbean]] littoral in 1500 led by [[Rodrigo de Bastidas]]. [[Christopher Columbus]] navigated near the Caribbean in 1502. In 1508, [[Vasco Nuñez de Balboa]] started the conquest of the territory through the region of Urabá. In 1513, he was also the first European to discover the [[Pacific Ocean]] which he called ''Mar del Sur'' (or "Sea of the South") and which in fact would bring the Spaniards to [[Peru]] and [[Chile]]. In 1510,<ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.unep-wcmc.org/sites/wh/darien.html |title=UNEP-WCMC Protected Areas Programme - Darién National Park |accessdate=2007-05-23 }}</ref> the first European city in the [[Americas|American Continent]] was founded, [[Santa María la Antigua del Darién]] in what is today the [[Chocó|Chocó Department]]. The territory's main population was made up of hundreds of tribes of the [[Chibchan]] and "Karib", currently known as the Caribbean people, whom the Spaniards conquered through warfare, while resulting disease, exploitation, and the conquest itself caused a tremendous demographic reduction among the indigenous. In the sixteenth century, [[European ethnic groups|Europeans]] began to bring slaves from Africa.
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===Climate===
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[[File:Nevado del tolima y sus frailejones.jpg|thumb|400px|Mountain climate is one of the unique features of the [[Andes]] and other high altitude reliefs]]
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Colombia's proximity to the [[equator]] influences its [[climate]]s. The lowland areas are continuously hot, but altitude greatly affects temperature. Mountain climate is one of the unique features of the [[Andes]] and other high altitude reliefs where climate is determined by elevation. Below 1,000 meters (3,281 ft) in elevation is the warm altitudinal zone, where temperatures are above 24 °C (75.2 °F). About 82.5 percent of the country's total area lies in the warm altitudinal zone. The temperate climate altitudinal zone located between 1,001 and 2,000 meters (3,284 and 6,562 ft) is characterized for presenting an average temperature ranging between 17 and 24 °C (62.6 and 75.2 °F). The cold climate is present between 2,001 and 3,000 meters (6,565 and 9,843 ft) and the temperatures vary between 12 and 17 °C (53.6 and 62.6 °F). Beyond lies the alpine conditions of the forested zone and then the treeless grasslands of the páramos. Above 4,000 meters (13,123 ft), where temperatures are below freezing, the climate is glacial, a zone of permanent snow and ice.  
  
===Independence from Spain===
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[[Rain|Rainfall]] varies by location in Colombia, tending to increase as one travels southward. This is especially true in the eastern lowlands. For example, rainfall in parts of the Guajira Peninsula seldom exceeds 30&nbsp;in (75&nbsp;cm) per year. Colombia's rainy southeast, however, is often drenched by more than 200&nbsp;in (500&nbsp;cm) of rain per year. Rainfall in most of the rest of the country lies between these two extremes.
[[Image:Congreso de Cúcuta.jpg|thumb|200px|right|[[Francisco de Paula Santander]], [[Simón Bolivar]] and other heroes of the Independence of Colombia in the [[Congress of Cúcuta]].]]
 
Since the beginning of the periods of Conquest and Colonization, there were several rebel movements under Spanish rule, most of them either being crushed or remaining too weak to change the overall situation. The last one, which sought outright independence from Spain, sprang up around 1810, following the independence of St. Domingue in 1804 (present day [[Haiti]]), who provided a non-negligible degree of support to the eventual leaders of this rebellion: [[Simón Bolívar]] and [[Francisco de Paula Santander]]. Simón Bolívar had become the first president of Colombia and Francisco de Paula Santander was [[Vice President of Colombia|Vice President]]; when Simón Bolívar stepped down, Santander became the second president of Colombia. The rebellion finally succeeded in 1819 when the territory of the [[Viceroyalty of New Granada]] became the Republic of [[Greater Colombia]] organized as a Confederation along [[Ecuador]] and [[Venezuela]] ([[Panama]] was part of Colombia).
 
  
===Political struggle===
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===Vegetation===
Internal political and territorial divisions led to the secession of [[Venezuela]] and [[Quito]] (today's [[Ecuador]]) in 1830. At this time, the so-called "Department of [[Cundinamarca]]" adopted then the name "[[Nueva Granada]]", which it kept until 1856 when it became the "Confederación Granadina" ([[Grenadine Confederation]]). After a [[Colombian Civil War (1860-1862)|two year civil war]] in 1863, the "[[United States of Colombia]]" was created, lasting until 1886, when the country finally became known as the Republic of Colombia. Internal divisions remained between the bipartisan political forces, occasionally igniting very bloody [[civil war]]s, the most significant being the [[Thousand Days War|Thousand Days civil war]] (1899 -  1902) which together with the United States intentions to influence in the area (specially the [[Panama Canal]] construction and control) led to the separation of the Department of [[Panama]] in 1903 and the establishment of it as a nation. Colombia engulfed in a year long war with [[Peru]] over a territorial dispute involving the [[Amazonas Department]] and its capital [[Leticia, Colombia|Leticia]].
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[[Image:Coffee Farmer.jpg|thumb|300px|A coffee farmer meticulously sorts coffee beans near Armenia, Quindío.]]
  
===La Violencia===
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Altitude affects not only temperature but also vegetation. In fact, altitude is one of the most important influences on vegetation patterns in Colombia. The mountainous parts of the country can be divided into several vegetation zones according to altitude, although the altitude limits of each zone may vary somewhat depending on the latitude.
{{main|La Violencia|El Bogotazo}}
 
Soon after, Colombia achieved a relative degree of political stability, which was interrupted by a bloody conflict that took place between the late 1940s and the early 1950s, a period known as ''[[La Violencia]]'' ("The Violence"). Its cause was mainly because of mounting tensions between the two leading political parties, which subsequently ignited after the assassination of the [[Colombian Liberal Party|Liberal]] Presidential candidate [[Jorge Eliécer Gaitán]] on [[April 9]], [[1948]]. This assassination caused riots in [[Bogotá]] and became known as [[El Bogotazo]], the violence from these riots spread through out the country and claimed the lives of at least 180,000 Colombians. From 1953 to 1964 the violence between the two political parties decreased first when [[Gustavo Rojas Pinilla|Gustavo Rojas]] deposed the President of Colombia in a [[coup d'etat]], and negotiated with the guerrillas, and then under the [[military junta]] of General [[Gabriel París Gordillo]].
 
  
===The National Front===
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The ''"tierra caliente"'' (hot land), below 3,300&nbsp;ft (1,000&nbsp;m), is the zone of tropical crops such as [[banana]]s. The ''tierra templada'' (temperate land), extending from an altitude of 3,300 to 6,600&nbsp;ft (1,000 to 2,000&nbsp;m), is the zone of [[coffee]] and [[maize]].
{{main|National Front (Colombia)}}
 
After Rojas deposition the two political parties [[Colombian Conservative Party]] and [[Colombian Liberal Party]] agreed to the creation of a "National Front", whereby the Liberal and Conservative parties would govern jointly. The presidency would be determined by an alternating conservative and liberal president every 4 years for 16 years; the two parties would have parity in all other elective offices. The National Front ended "[[La Violencia]]", and National Front administrations attempted to institute far-reaching social and economic reforms in cooperation with the Alliance for Progress. In the end, the contradictions between each successive Liberal and Conservative administration made the results decidedly mixed. Despite the progress in certain sectors, many social and political injustices continued and many guerrillas were formally created such as the [[FARC]], [[National Liberation Army (Colombia)|ELN]] and [[19th of April Movement|M-19]] to fight the government and political apparatus with influences from [[Cold War]] doctrines.
 
  
===Colombian armed conflict ===
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[[Wheat]] and [[potato]]es dominate in the ''"tierra fría"'' (cold land), at altitudes from 6,600 to 10,500&nbsp;ft (2,000 to 3,200&nbsp;m). In the ''"zona forestada"'' (forested zone), which is located between 10,500 and 12,800&nbsp;ft (3,200 and 3,900&nbsp;m), many of the trees have been cut for firewood. Treeless pastures dominate the ''páramos,'' or alpine grasslands, at altitudes of 12,800 to 15,100&nbsp;ft (3,900 to 4,600&nbsp;m). Above 15,100&nbsp;ft (4,600&nbsp;m), where temperatures are below freezing, is the ''"tierra helada,"'' a zone of permanent snow and ice.
{{main|Colombian armed conflict (1960s–present)|War on drugs}}
 
During the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s and 1990s powerful and violent [[drug cartel]]s emerged, mainly the [[Medellín Cartel]] (under the command of [[Pablo Escobar]]) and the [[Cali Cartel]], which exerted political, economic and social influence in Colombia during this period. These cartels also financed and influenced different illegally armed groups throughout the political spectrum. Some enemies of these allied with the guerrillas and created or influenced [[Paramilitarism in Colombia|paramilitary groups]].  
 
  
To replace the previous 1886 constitution, a new constitution was ratified in 1991 (the [[Colombian Constitution of 1991]]), after being drafted by the [[Constituent Assembly of Colombia]]. The constitution included key provisions on political, ethnic, human and gender rights, which have been gradually put in practice, though uneven developments, surrounding controversies, and setbacks have persisted. The new constitution also initially prohibited the extradition of Colombian nationals to the United States. There were accusations of lobbying by drug cartels in favor of this prohibition, who also promoted a violent campaign against extradition. Many [[terrorist attack]]s and [[mafia]] style executions followed. Drug Cartels tried to influence the government and political structure of Colombia by means of corruption, as in the case of the [[8000 Process]] scandal.
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Vegetation also responds to rainfall patterns. A scrub woodland of scattered [[tree]]s and bushes dominates the semiarid northeast. To the south, [[savanna]] (tropical grassland) vegetation covers the Colombian portion of the llanos. The rainy areas in the southeast are blanketed by [[tropical rainforest]]. In the [[mountain]]s, the spotty patterns of precipitation in alpine areas complicate vegetation patterns. The rainy side of a mountain may be lush and green, while the other side, in the rain shadow, may be parched.
  
In recent decades, the country has continued to be plagued by the effects of the influential [[Illegal drug trade|drug trade]], [[guerrilla warfare|guerrilla]] [[insurgent|insurgencies]] like [[FARC]] and paramilitary groups such as the [[United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia|AUC]] (later demobilized, though paramilitarism remains active), which along with other minor factions have engaged in a bloody internal [[Colombian Armed Conflict|armed conflict]]. Analysts have claimed that the drug cartels have helped the Colombian trade balance through a steady and substantial influx of foreign currency, mainly [[US dollars]], though other negative economic and social effects have also resulted. On the other hand, the drug lords have also destabilized the government.  
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==History==
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===Pre-Columbian era===
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[[Image:Muisca raft Legend of El Dorado Offerings of gold.jpg|thumb|right|400px|The Zipa used to cover his body in gold and, from his raft, offered treasures to the ''Guatavita'' goddess in the middle of the sacred lake. This Muisca tradition became the origin of the El Dorado legend.]]
  
The different irregular groups often resort to [[kidnapping]] and [[drug smuggling]] to fund their causes, tend to operate in large areas of the remote rural countryside and can sometimes disrupt communications and travel between different regions. Since the early 1980s, attempts at reaching a negotiated settlement between the government and the different rebel groups have been made, either failing or achieving only the partial demobilization of some of the parties involved. One of the latest such attempts was made during the administration of President [[Andrés Pastrana]], which negotiated with the FARC between 1998 and 2002.
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The first humans are believed to have arrived in the area from [[Central America]] about 20,000 B.C.E. Circa 10,000 B.C.E., [[hunter-gatherer]] societies existed near present-day [[Bogotá]] that traded with one another and with cultures living in the Magdalena River Valley.<ref>T. Van der Hammen, and G. Correal, Prehistoric Man on the Sabana de Bogota: Data for an Ecological Prehistory, ''Paleography, Paleoclimatology, Paleoecology'' 25 (1978): 179-190. </ref> Further waves of Mesoamericans—indigenous peoples of Central America—arrived between 1,200 and 500 B.C.E. and introduced [[corn|maize]]. The Chibcha people came from present-day [[Nicaragua]] and [[Honduras]] between 400 and 300 B.C.E.. They grew [[potato]]es, corn, and other crops; developed [[irrigation system]]s; mined [[emerald]]s and [[salt]]; and built roads and suspension [[bridge]]s.
  
In the late 1990s, President Andrés Pastrana implemented an initiative named [[Plan Colombia]], with the dual goal of ending the armed conflict and promoting a strong [[narcotic|anti-narcotic]] strategy. The most controversial element of the Plan, which as implemented also included a smaller number of funds for institutional and alternative development, was considered to be its anti-narcotic strategy, consisting of an increase in aerial [[fumigation]]s to eradicate [[coca]]. This activity came under fire from several sectors, which claimed that fumigation also damaged legal crops and has adverse health effects for population exposed to the [[herbicide]]s. Critics of the initiative also claim that the Plan represents a military approach to problems that have additional roots in the social inequalities of the country, and that it causes Coca farmers to clear out new fields for crops deeper into jungle areas significantly increasing the rate of deforestation in the region.
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Within Colombia, the two cultures with the most complex power structures were the Tayronas on the [[Caribbean]] coast and the Muiscas in the highlands around Bogotá, both of which were of the Chibcha language family. The Muisca people are considered to have had one of the most developed political systems in [[South America]], after the [[Incas]].<ref>Sylvia Broadbent, ''Los Chibchas: organización socio-política'' Série Latinoamericana 5 (Bogotá: Facultad de Sociología, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, 1964). </ref>
  
During the presidency of [[Álvaro Uribe]], who was elected on the promise of applying military pressure on the FARC and other criminal groups, some security indicators have improved, showing a decrease in reported kidnappings (from 3700 in the year 2000 to 800 in 2005) and a decrease of more than 48% in homicides between July 2002 and May 2005. It is argued that these improvements have favored economic growth and tourism.<ref>[http://www.economist.com/world/la/displaystory.cfm?story_id=7121789 Come to Sunny Colombia] '''The Economist''', [[29 June]] [[2006]].</ref> But paramilitaries belonging to [[paramilitarism in Colombia|paramilitary groups]] mainly the [[United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia|AUC group]] colluded with some government officials and politicians in an attempt to eventually take control over the country, this scandal became known as the [[2006–2007 Colombian parapolitics scandal|''Parapolitic Scandal'']].<ref>[http://www.polodemocratico.net/Por-que-la-parapolitica {{es icon}} Polo Democratico Alternativo ¿Por qué la parapolítica? February 26, 2007. Retrieved on August 19, 2007]</ref>
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===Colonial era===
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[[Spain|Spanish]] explorers made the first exploration of the [[Caribbean]] littoral in 1500 led by Rodrigo de Bastidas. [[Christopher Columbus]] navigated near the Caribbean in 1502. In 1508, [[Vasco Nuñez de Balboa]] began the conquest of the territory through the region of Urabá. In 1513, he was also the first European to discover the [[Pacific Ocean]], which he called ''Mar del Sur'' (or "Sea of the South") and which in fact would bring the Spaniards to [[Peru]] and [[Chile]].  
  
Analysts and critics inside Colombia agree that there has been a degree of practical improvement in several of the mentioned fields, but the exact reasons for the figures themselves have sometimes been disputed, as well as their specific accuracy. Some [[Opposition (politics)|opposition]] sectors have criticized the government's security strategy, claiming that it is not enough to solve Colombia's complex problems and that it has contributed to creating a favorable environment for the continuation of some [[human rights abuses]].
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In 1510, the first European city in the Americas was founded, Santa María la Antigua del Darién. The territory's main population was made up of hundreds of tribes of the Chibchan and "Carib," currently known as the Caribbean people, whom the Spaniards conquered through warfare. Resulting [[disease]], exploitation, and the conquest itself caused a tremendous demographic reduction among the indigenous peoples. In the sixteenth century, Europeans began to bring [[slave trade|slaves]] from [[Africa]].
  
==Geography==
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===Independence from Spain===
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[[Image:Congreso de Cúcuta.jpg|thumb|300px|right|[[Francisco de Paula Santander]], [[Simon Bolivar|Simón Bolivar]], and other heroes of the Independence of Colombia in the Congress of Cúcuta.]]
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Since the beginning of the periods of conquest and colonization, there were several rebel movements under Spanish rule, most of them either being crushed or remaining too weak to change the overall situation. The last one, which sought outright independence from Spain, sprang up around 1810, following the independence of St. Domingue in 1804 (present-day [[Haiti]]), which provided a  degree of support to the eventual leaders of this rebellion: [[Simón Bolívar]] and [[Francisco de Paula Santander]], who became the first two presidents of Colombia. The rebellion finally succeeded in 1819, when the territory of the Viceroyalty of New Granada became the Republic of Greater Colombia, organized as a confederation along with [[Ecuador]] and [[Venezuela]] ([[Panama]] was part of Colombia).
  
[[Image:Colombia rel 2001-2.png|thumb|300px|right|Shaded relief map of Colombia.]]
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===Political struggle===
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Internal political and territorial divisions led to the secession of [[Venezuela]] and [[Quito]] (today's [[Ecuador]]) in 1830. At this time, the name New Granada was adopted, which it kept until 1856 when it became the Grenadine Confederation. After a two-year [[civil war]], in 1863, the United States of Colombia was created, lasting until 1886, when the country finally became known as the Republic of Colombia.
  
{{main|Geography of Colombia|Environmental issues in Colombia}}
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Internal divisions remained, occasionally igniting bloody [[civil war]]s, the most significant being the Thousand Days civil war (1899-1902). U.S. intentions to build the [[Panama Canal]] led to the separation of Panama in 1903 and its establishment as a separate nation. Colombia was also engulfed in a year-long war with [[Peru]] over a territorial dispute involving the Amazonas Department and its capital Leticia.
  
Colombia has more physical diversity packed into its borders than any other area of comparable size in Latin America.<ref>Benton, M. J.. (2001): "Biodiversity on land and in the sea.", en Geological Journal, vol. 36, Nº 3-4</ref> The country is part of the [[Pacific Ring of Fire]], a region of the world characterized by frequent earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
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===''La Violencia''===
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Soon after Colombia achieved a relative degree of political stability, which was interrupted by a bloody conflict that took place between the late 1940s and the early 1950s, a period known as ''La Violencia'' ("The Violence"). Its cause was mounting tensions between the two leading political parties, which ignited after the assassination of the Liberal presidential candidate on April 9, 1948. This assassination caused riots in [[Bogotá.]] The violence spread throughout the country and claimed the lives of at least 180,000 Colombians. From 1953 to 1964 the violence between the two political parties decreased, first when [[Gustavo Rojas]] deposed the president in a [[coup d'etat]] and negotiated with the [[Guerrilla warfare|guerrillas]], and then under the military junta of General Gabriel París Gordillo.
  
Colombian surface features form complicated patterns. The western third of the country is the most complex. Starting at the shore of the Pacific Ocean in the west and moving eastward at a latitude of 5 degrees north, a diverse sequence of features is encountered. In the extreme west are the very narrow and discontinuous Pacific coastal lowlands, which are backed by the [[Baudó Mountains|Serranía de Baudó]], the lowest and narrowest of Colombia's mountain ranges. Next is the broad region of the Río Atrato/Río San Juan lowland, which has been proposed as a possible alternate to the Panama Canal as a human-made route between the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans.
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===The National Front===
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The two main political parties—the Conservative Party and Liberal Party—agreed to create a coalition government. The presidency would alternate between parties every four years; the parties would have parity in all other elective offices. The National Front ended "La Violencia" and attempted to institute far-reaching social and economic reforms in cooperation with the [[Alliance for Progress]]. In the end, the contradictions between each successive Liberal and Conservative administration made the results decidedly mixed. Despite progress in certain sectors, many social and political injustices continued. [[Guerrilla]] movements including FARC, ELN, and M-19 were created to fight the government and political apparatus.
  
The chief western mountain range, the Cordillera Occidental, is a moderately high range with peaks reaching up to about 13,000&nbsp;ft (4,000&nbsp;m). The Cauca River Valley, an important agricultural region with several large cities on its borders, separates the Cordillera Occidental from the massive Cordillera Central. Several snow-clad volcanoes in the Cordillera Central have summits that rise above 18,000&nbsp;ft (5,500&nbsp;m). The valley of the slow-flowing and muddy Magdalena River, a major transportation artery, separates the Cordillera Central from the main eastern range, the Cordillera Oriental. The peaks of the Cordillera Oriental are moderately high. This range differs from Colombia's other mountain ranges in that it contains several large basins. In the east, the sparsely populated, flat to gently rolling eastern lowlands called llanos cover almost 60 percent of the country's total land area.
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===Colombian armed conflict ===
 
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[[Image:Ingrid Betancourt.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Poster of Ingrid Beancourt in Paris, France, on the fifth anniversary (February 2007) of her kidnapping by FARC.]]  
This cross section of the republic does not include two of Colombia's regions: the Caribbean coastal lowlands and the [[Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta]], both in the northern part of the country. The lowlands in the west are mostly swampy; the reed-filled marshes of the area are called ''ciénagas'' by the people of Colombia. The Guajira Peninsula in the east is semiarid. The Sierra Nevada is a spectacular triangular snowcapped block of rock that towers over the eastern part of this lowland.
 
  
Colombia's proximity to the equator influences its climates. The lowland areas are continuously hot. Altitude affects temperature greatly. Temperatures decrease about 3.5 °[[Fahrenheit|F]] (2 °[[Celsius|C]]) for every 1,000-foot (300-meter) increase in altitude above sea level. Rainfall varies by location in Colombia, tending to increase as one travels southward. This is especially true in the eastern lowlands. For example, rainfall in parts of the Guajira Peninsula seldom exceeds 30&nbsp;in (75&nbsp;cm) per year. Colombia's rainy southeast, however, is often drenched by more than 200&nbsp;in (500&nbsp;cm) of rain per year. Rainfall in most of the rest of the country runs between these two extremes.
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During the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s and 1990s, powerful and violent [[drug cartel]]s emerged, mainly the [[Medellín Cartel]] (under the command of [[Pablo Escobar]]) and the [[Cali Cartel]], which exerted political, economic, and social influence in Colombia during this period. These cartels also financed and influenced different illegally armed groups across the political spectrum.  
  
Altitude affects not only temperature, but also vegetation. In fact, altitude is one of the most important influences on vegetation patterns in Colombia. The mountainous parts of the country can be divided into several vegetation zones according to altitude, although the altitude limits of each zone may vary somewhat depending on the latitude.
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To replace the previous 1886 constitution, a new constitution was ratified in 1991 that included key provisions on political, ethnic, [[human rights|human]], and [[gender rights]], which have been gradually put in practice, though uneven developments, surrounding controversies, and setbacks have persisted. The new constitution also initially prohibited the [[extradition]] of Colombian nationals to the [[United States]]. The drug cartels were accused of lobbying in favor of this prohibition and carried out a violent campaign against extradition that included [[terrorism|terrorist]] attacks and [[mafia]]-style executions. Drug cartels attempted to influence the government and the political structure of Colombia by means of [[corruption]].
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In recent decades, the country has continued to be plagued by the effects of the influential [[drug trafficking|drug trade]], [[guerrilla warfare|guerrilla]] insurgencies like FARC, and paramilitary groups such as the AUC (later demobilized, though paramilitarism remains active), which, along with other minor factions, have engaged in a bloody internal armed conflict.
  
The "tierra caliente" (hot land), below 3,300&nbsp;ft (1,000&nbsp;m), is the zone of tropical crops such as bananas. The tierra templada (temperate land), extending from an altitude of 3,300 to 6,600&nbsp;ft (1,000 to 2,000&nbsp;m), is the zone of coffee and maize. Wheat and potatoes dominate in the "tierra fría" (cold land), at altitudes from 6,600 to 10,500&nbsp;ft (2,000 to 3,200&nbsp;m). In the "zona forestada" (forested zone), which is located between 10,500 and 12,800&nbsp;ft (3,200 and 3,900&nbsp;m), many of the trees have been cut for firewood. Treeless pastures dominate the páramos, or alpine grasslands, at altitudes of 12,800 to 15,100&nbsp;ft (3,900 to 4,600&nbsp;m). Above 15,100&nbsp;ft (4,600&nbsp;m), where temperatures are below freezing, is the "tierra helada", a zone of permanent snow and ice.
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Analysts claimed that the drug cartels helped the Colombian [[trade balance]] through a steady and substantial influx of foreign currency, mainly U.S. dollars, though other negative economic and social effects also resulted. The drug lords have also destabilized the government.  
  
Vegetation also responds to rainfall patterns. A scrub woodland of scattered trees and bushes dominates the semiarid northeast. To the south, [[savannah]] (tropical grassland) vegetation covers the Colombian portion of the llanos. The rainy areas in the southeast are blanketed by tropical rainforest. In the mountains, the spotty patterns of precipitation in alpine areas complicate vegetation patterns. The rainy side of a mountain may be lush and green, while the other side, in the rain shadow, may be parched.
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The different irregular groups often resort to [[kidnapping]] and drug [[smuggling]] to fund their causes. They tend to operate in the remote rural countryside and can sometimes disrupt communications and travel between regions. Colombia's most famous hostage, especially internationally, was [[Ingrid Betancourt]], a former senator and presidential candidate known as an outspoken and daring anti-corruption activist. She was kidnapped by FARC in 2002, while campaigning for the presidency and was finally rescued by the government in 2008.
  
Colombia is considered to be among 17 of the most [[megadiverse countries]] in the world.<ref>{{cite news | first= | last= | coauthors= | title=South America Banks on Regional Strategy to Safeguard Quarter of Earth's Biodiversity | date= | publisher= | url =http://www.conservation.org/xp/news/press_releases/2003/091603_andean_eng.xml | work =Conservation International | pages = | accessdate = 2007-06-29 | language = }}</ref>
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Since the early 1980s, attempts at reaching a negotiated settlement between the government and different rebel groups have been made, either failing or achieving only the partial demobilization of some of the parties involved. One of the latest such attempts was made during the administration of President Andrés Pastrana, which negotiated with the FARC between 1998 and 2002.
  
==Government==
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In the late 1990s, President Andrés Pastrana implemented an initiative named Plan Colombia, with the dual goal of ending the armed conflict and promoting a strong anti-narcotic strategy. The most controversial element of the Plan, which as implemented also included a smaller number of funds for institutional and alternative development, was considered to be its anti-narcotic strategy, consisting of an increase in aerial fumigations to eradicate [[coca]]. This activity came under fire from several sectors, which claimed that fumigation also damaged legal crops and has adverse health effects for populations exposed to the [[herbicide]]s. Critics of the initiative also claim that the plan represents a military approach to problems that have their roots in the social inequalities of the country, and that it causes coca farmers to clear new fields for crops deeper within jungle areas, significantly increasing the rate of [[deforestation]].
[[Image:Uribe2896.jpeg|thumb|right|150px|Álvaro Uribe, [[President of Colombia]].]]
 
{{main|Politics of Colombia}}
 
{{seealso|Colombian Constitution of 1991|Elections in Colombia}}
 
; Executive Branch : Colombia is a republic where the executive branch dominates government structure. Until recently, the president was elected together with the [[Vice President of Colombia|vice president]] by popular vote for a single four-year term; he functioned as both [[head of government]] and [[head of state]]. However, on [[October 19]], [[2005]], the Colombian Congress amended the constitution, which now allows Colombian presidents to serve up to two consecutive four-year terms. However, department governors, mayors of cities and towns and other executive branch officials are only elected for a three-year term, and cannot be immediately re-elected.<br/><p>On [[May 28]] [[2006]], president [[Álvaro Uribe Vélez|Álvaro Uribe]] was re-elected by a vote of 62%, with 22% going to [[Carlos Gaviria Díaz|Carlos Gaviria]] of the [[Independent Democratic Pole|Democratic Pole]], and 12% to [[Horacio Serpa Uribe|Horacio Serpa]] of the [[Colombian Liberal Party|Liberal Party]].
 
  
; Legislative branch : Colombia's bicameral parliament is the [[Congress of Colombia]], (or ''Congreso'' in Spanish), which consists of a 166-seat [[Chamber of Representatives of Colombia]] and the 102-seat [[Senate of Colombia]]. Members of both houses are elected by popular vote to serve four-year terms. With congressmen, Colombia also elects Department deputies, and city councils.
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During the presidency of Álvaro Uribe, who was elected on the promise of applying military pressure on the FARC and other criminal groups, some security indicators have improved, such as a decrease in reported kidnappings (from 3,700 in 2000 to 800 in 2005) and a decrease of more than 48 percent in homicides between July 2002 and May 2005. It is argued that these improvements have favored economic growth and tourism.  
  
[[Image:CapitolioNacionalDeColombia2004-7.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The [[Capitolio Nacional|National Capitol Building]] houses the [[Colombian Congress]]. Downtown Bogotá.]]
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Uribe, who took office in August 2002, is a staunch [[U.S.]] ally whose country was the only one in South America to join the U.S.-led coalition in [[Iraq]]. He met President George Bush several times, most recently in May 2007.
; Judicial branch : In the 1990s, the Colombian judicial system underwent significant reforms and is undergoing a process of migration from an [[inquisitorial]] system to an [[adversarial system]]. Parts of the coffee growing region of Colombia and Bogotá have already adopted the adversarial system, with the rest of the country following suit starting on [[January 1]] [[2006]].<!--seems outdated; rephrasing needed—> The judicial system is headed by the Constitutional Court and members are appointed by Congress out of nominations made by the President and other high ranking tribunals.
 
  
; Control Institutions: [[Procuraduría General de la Nación]] (General Procurement of the Nation), [[Defensoría del Pueblo]], (Defensory of the People) [[Auditoría General de la República]] (General  Auditing of the Republic) and the [[Contraloría General de la República]] (General Control of the Republic).
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==Government==
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[[Image:CapitolioNacionalDeColombia2004-7.jpg|thumb|right|400px|The National Capitol Building houses the Colombian Congress. Downtown Bogotá.]]
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; Executive branch: Colombia is a republic where the executive branch dominates the government structure. Until recently, the president was elected together with the vice president by popular vote for a single four-year term; he functioned as both head of government and head of state. However, on October 19, 2005, the Colombian Congress amended the constitution, which now allows Colombian presidents to serve two consecutive four-year terms. However, department governors, mayors of cities and towns, and other executive branch officials are only elected for a three-year term and cannot be immediately re-elected.<br/><p>
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; Legislative branch: Colombia's bicameral parliament consists of a 166-seat Chamber of Representatives and an 102-seat Senate. Members of both houses are elected by popular vote to serve four-year terms. Colombia also elects department deputies and city council members.
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; Judicial branch: In the 1990s, the Colombian judicial system underwent significant reforms and switched from an inquisitorial to an adversarial system. The judicial system is headed by the Constitutional Court and members are appointed by Congress out of nominations made by the president and other high-ranking tribunals.
  
; Electoral Institutions: [[Consejo Nacional Electoral]] (National Electoral Council) and [[Registraduría Nacional del Estado Civil]] (National Registry of the Civil State).
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=== Administrative divisions===
 
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Colombia is divided into 32 departments and one capital district. The departments are subdivided into 1,119 municipalities and have ten districts, the Old Four (Bogota, Barranquilla, Cartagena, and Santa Marta) and the New Six (Tunja, Cucuta, Popayan, Buenaventura, Tumaco, and Turbo).
Colombia is also a member of the [[Union of South American Nations]].
 
 
 
== Administrative divisions==
 
[[Image:Colombia-departamentos.png|thumb|right|250px|Departments of Colombia]]
 
{{main|Departments of Colombia|Municipalities of Colombia}}
 
Colombia is divided into 32 [[Departments of Colombia|departments]] and one capital district (asterisked below).
 
{{columns
 
|width=180px
 
|col1 =
 
{{spaces|2}}1 [[Amazonas Department, Colombia|Amazonas]] <br/>
 
{{spaces|2}}2 [[Antioquia Department|Antioquia]]        <br/>
 
{{spaces|2}}3 [[Arauca Department|Arauca]]              <br/>
 
{{spaces|2}}4 [[Atlántico Department|Atlántico]]        <br/>
 
{{spaces|2}}5 [[Bolívar Department|Bolívar]]            <br/>
 
{{spaces|2}}6 [[Boyacá Department|Boyacá]]              <br/>
 
{{spaces|2}}7 [[Caldas Department|Caldas]]              <br/>
 
{{spaces|2}}8 [[Caquetá Department|Caquetá]]            <br/>
 
{{spaces|2}}9 [[Casanare Department|Casanare]]          <br/>
 
10 [[Cauca Department|Cauca]]              <br/>
 
11 [[Cesar Department|Cesar]]              <br/>
 
12 [[Chocó Department|Chocó]]              <br/>
 
13 [[Córdoba Department|Córdoba]]          <br/>
 
14 [[Cundinamarca Department|Cundinamarca]] <br/>
 
15 [[Guainía Department|Guainía]]          <br/>
 
16 [[Guaviare Department|Guaviare]]        <br/>
 
17 [[Huila Department|Huila]]
 
|col2 =
 
18 [[Guajira Department|La Guajira]]  <br/>
 
19 [[Magdalena Department|Magdalena]] <br/>
 
20 [[Meta Department|Meta]]          <br/>
 
21 [[Nariño Department|Nariño]]      <br/>
 
22 [[Norte de Santander Department|Norte de Santander]]<br/>
 
23 [[Putumayo Department|Putumayo]]  <br/>
 
24 [[Quindío Department|Quindío]]    <br/>
 
25 [[Risaralda Department|Risaralda]] <br/>
 
26 [[San Andrés and Providencia Department|San Andrés and Providencia]]<br/>
 
27 [[Santander Department|Santander]] <br/>
 
28 [[Sucre Department|Sucre]]        <br/>
 
29 [[Tolima Department|Tolima]]      <br/>
 
30 [[Valle del Cauca]]                <br/>
 
31 [[Vaupes]]                        <br/>
 
32 [[Vichada Department|Vichada]]    <br/>
 
33 [[Bogotá]]* (''Distrito Capital'')
 
}}
 
 
 
The departments are subdivided into 1,119 municipalities (''municipios'').and have 10 Districts, the Old 4 (Bogota, Barranquilla, Cartagena and Santa Marta) and the New 6 (Tunja, Cucuta, Popayan, Buenaventura, Tumaco and Turbo).
 
  
 
==Economy==
 
==Economy==
[[Image:Colombia - GDP and unemployment.jpg|thumb|right|250px|GDP growth and unemployment rate 2001I-2007I]]
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After experiencing decades of steady growth (average GDP growth exceeded 4 percent in the 1970-1998 period), Colombia experienced a [[recession]] in 1999 (the first full year of negative growth since 1929), and the recovery from that recession was long and painful. Colombia's economy suffers from weak domestic and foreign demand, austere government budgets, and serious internal armed conflicts.  
[[Image:1000 Peso Schein Kolumbien Vorne.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Front of a Colombian 1,000 peso bill.]]
 
[[Image:Coffee Farmer.jpg|thumb|175px|left|A coffee farmer meticulously sorts [[Colombian coffee|Coffee]] beans near [[Armenia, Colombia|Armenia]], [[Quindío Department|Quindío]].]]
 
  
{{main|Economy of Colombia}}
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Colombia's main exports include manufactured goods, [[petroleum]], [[coal]] , and [[coffee]].
  
After experiencing decades of steady growth (average [[GDP]] growth exceeded 4% in the 1970-1998 period), Colombia experienced a [[recession]] in 1999 (the first full year of negative growth since 1929), and the recovery from that recession was long and painful. Colombia's economy suffers from weak domestic and foreign demand, austere government budgets, and serious internal armed conflicts. The IMF Economic Indicators published on September 2006, forecast the Colombian GDP to reach [[US$]]156.69 billion in 2008. [[Inflation]] has been below 6% for 2004, 2005, and 2006. Colombia's main [[export]]s include manufactured goods (41.32% of exports), [[petroleum]] (28.28%), coal (13.17%), and [[Federación Nacional de Cafeteros de Colombia|coffee]] (6.25%). Colombia is one of the largest producers of [[pop-up book]]s in the world.<ref>{{cite web |last=Montanaro |first=Ann |title=A Concise History of Pop-up and Movable Books |url=http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/rul/libs/scua/montanar/p-intro.htm |accessdate= 2007-02-01}}</ref>
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Colombia is also the largest exporter of [[plantain]]s to the United States. Within Latin America, Colombia is known as a provider of fine lingerie, with the industry being centered in Medellín. All imports, exports, and the general trade balance are in record levels, and the inflow of export dollars has resulted in substantial revaluation of the Colombian peso.
  
Colombia is also the largest exporter of [[plantain]]s to the United States. Within Latin America, Colombia is known as a provider of fine [[lingerie]], with the industry being centered in [[Medellín]]. All [[import]]s, exports, and the general trade balance are in record levels, and the inflow of export dollars has resulted in substantial revaluation of the [[Colombian peso|Colombian Peso]].
+
The problems facing the country range from [[pension]] system problems to [[Cocaine|drug]] dealing to moderately high unemployment (12 percent). Several international financial institutions have praised the economic reforms introduced by current  
 
 
The problems facing the country range from [[pension]] system problems to [[Cocaine|drug]] dealing to moderately high unemployment (12%). Several international financial institutions have praised the economic reforms introduced by current President [[Álvaro Uribe]], which include measures designed to bring the public-sector deficit below 2.5% of gross domestic product (GDP). The government's economic policy and its controversial [[democratic security strategy]] have engendered a growing sense of confidence in the economy, and GDP growth in 2003 was among the highest in [[Latin America]].  On May 28, 2007, the American magazine BusinessWeek published an article naming Colombia the most Extreme Emerging Market on Earth.<ref>[http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_22/b4036001.htm BusinessWeek, Colombia, The Most Extreme Emerging Market on Earth] [[May 28, 2007]]</ref>
 
  
 
===Tourism===
 
===Tourism===
{{main|Tourism in Colombia}}
+
[[Image:Santamartaaquarium.png|thumb|right|400px|Rodadero Aquarium near Santa Marta.]]
[[Image:Santamartaaquarium.png|thumb|right|250px|[[Rodadero Aquarium]] near [[Santa Marta]].]]
+
Most tourists come to Colombia during the famous festivals, such as the Cali Fair, the Barranquilla Carnival, the Bogotá summer festival, the Iberoamerican Theater Festival, and the Flower Festival. Many people visit Colombia during the [[Christmas]] season and the celebrations surrounding independence day.
During the most famous festivals such as the Cali Fair, the Barranquilla Carnival, the Bogota summer festival, the Iberoamerican Theater Festival and the Flower Festival is when the most tourists come to Colombia. Many people visit Colombia during Christmas time and the celebrations surrounding the Independence of Colombia.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.extremetourist.com/destinations/guide.php?country=Colombia&PHPSESSID=adf1f96f6e668d4711b8a8d8365c1934 |title=Colombia - Travel, adventure, action, eco-tourism and backpacking community the world over with ExtremeTourist.com |accessdate=2007-10-03}}</ref>
 
  
[[Image:Venta de artesnias en raquira, 2006.JPG|thumb|left|250px|[[Arts and crafts]] in the town of [[Ráquira]], [[Boyacá Department]].]]
+
Even though Colombia has been plagued with travel advisories because of the activities of FARC and other [[guerrilla]] groups, it has continued to attract more tourists.
Even though Colombia has been plagued with [[Travel advisory|Travel advisories]] because of [[FARC]] and other guerrillas groups, it has continued to attract more tourists in recent years. The apparent cause appears to be the current hardline approach of President Álvaro Uribe called [[democratic security]] to push rebels groups farther away from the major cities, highways and tourist sites that may attract international visitors. Since President Uribe took office in 2002, he has notably increased Colombia's stability and security by significantly boosting its military strength and police presence throughout the country. This apparently has achieved fruitful results for the [[Economy of Colombia|country's economy]], particularly international tourism. In 2006, tourism officials are expecting approximately 1.5 million international visitors to visit Colombia, an astonishing increase of about 50% from the previous year. Even Lonely Planet, a world travel publisher, has picked Colombia as one of their top 10 world destinations for 2006.<ref>{{cite news |publisher=Christian Science Monitor |title=Hot Destination: Colombia |date=[[May 9]], [[2006]] |url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0509/p06s01-woam.html}}</ref> The World Tourism Organization reported in 2004 that Colombia achieved the third highest percentage increase of tourist arrivals in South America between 2000 and 2004 (9.2%). Only [[Peru]] and [[Suriname]] had higher increases during the same period.<ref> [http://www.unwto.org/facts/eng/pdf/indicators/ITA_Americas.pdf International Tourist Arrivals by Country of Destination], '''Tourism Market Trends, 2005 Edition''', World Tourism Organization.</ref> Because of the improved security, cruise ships will begin returning to Cartagena in October 2007. To further point out the improved security in the country, in June 2007, the Travel Channel's show, ''5 Takes Latin America'',  aired an episode on Colombia. Points of interest on the show were Bogota, Cocora Valley in Salento, and the Salt Cathedral.<ref>[http://search.travel.discovery.com/travel/5%20Takes%20Latin%20America%20Colombia Travel Channel, 5 Takes Latin America] June 2007</ref>
 
  
====Ecotourism====
+
==Demographics==
{{col-start}}
+
[[Image:P1050225.JPG|thumb|300px|Las Lajas Cathedral in Nariño.]]
{{col-break}}
+
Movement from rural to urban areas was very heavy in the mid-twentieth century but has since tapered off. The urban population increased from 31 percent of the total population in 1938 to 57 percent in 1951 and 70 percent by 1990. The nine eastern lowlands departments, constituting about 54 percent of Colombia's area, have less than 3 percent of the population and a density of less than two persons per square mile (one person per sq km).
[[Image:Colwachspalme01.jpg|thumb|350px|right|Panoramic of Cocora valley with wax palms]]
 
* [[Amacayacu Park]] ([[Amazonas Department]])
 
* [[Colombian National Coffee Park]] ([[Montenegro, Quindío]])
 
* [[Nevado del Ruiz]] in [[Los Nevados]] National Park (near [[Manizales]])
 
* [[Cocora]] valley ([[Salento, Quindío]])
 
* [[PANACA|PANACA Park]]
 
* PANACA SABANA Park
 
* Tayrona Park ([[Santa Marta]])
 
* Desierto de Tatacoa
 
* Chicamocha Canyon National Park
 
* [[Gorgona, Colombia|Gorgona]] and [[Malpelo Island|Malpelo]] islands
 
  
'''Other'''
+
The country has a diverse population that reflects its colorful history and the peoples that have lived there from ancient times to the present. The historic amalgam of the different main groups forms the basics of Colombia's current demographics: [[Europe]]an immigrants, indigenous natives, [[Africa]]ns, [[Asia]]ns, [[Middle East]]erners, and other recent immigrants. Many of the indigenous peoples were absorbed into the mestizo population, but the remaining 700,000 currently represent over 85 distinct cultures.
  
* [[Bogotá Botanical Garden]] ([[Bogotá]])
+
The European immigrants were primarily [[Spain|Spanish]] colonists, but a small number of other Europeans ([[Netherlands|Dutch]], [[Germany|German]], [[France|French]], [[Switzerland|Swiss]], [[Belgium|Belgian]], and in smaller numbers, [[Poland|Polish]], [[Lithuania]]n, [[Britain|English]], and [[Croatia]]n communities) immigrated during [[World War II]] and the [[Cold War]]. For example, former Bogotá mayor Antanas Mockus is the son of Lithuanian immigrants.
* [[Gold Museum]] ([[Bogotá]])
 
{{col-end}}
 
  
==Culture==
+
Africans were brought as [[slavery|slaves]], mostly to the coastal lowlands, beginning early in the sixteenth century and continuing into the nineteenth century. After abolition, a national ideology of ''mestizaje'' encouraged the mixing of the indigenous, European, and Native Amerindian communities into a single mestizo ethnic identity.<ref>Luis Gilberto Murillo Urrutia, [http://www.jpanafrican.org/docs/vol8no2/8.2-12-El%20Choco.pdf El Choco: The African Heart of Colombia,] ''The Journal of Pan African Studies'' 8(2) (July 2015):256-260. Retrieved August 10, 2022. </ref> Other immigrant populations include [[Asia]]ns and [[Middle East]]erners, particularly [[Lebanon|Lebanese]], [[Jordan]]ians, [[Syria]]ns, [[China|Chinese]], [[Japan]]ese, and [[Korea]]ns.
{{main|Culture of Colombia}}
 
The '''culture of Colombia''' lies at the crossroads of [[Latin American culture|Latin America]].  Thanks partly to [[geography]], Colombian culture has been heavily [[fragmented]] into five major cultural regions. [[rural-urban migration|Rural to urban migration]] and [[globalization]] have changed how many Colombians live and express themselves as large cities become [[melting pot]]s of people (many of whom are refugees) from the various provinces that have hit Colombia through out its violent history, more recently is the displacement caused by the [[Colombian armed conflict]] to cities and other countries.
 
{{col-start}}
 
{{col-break}}
 
; General
 
* [[Colombian cuisine]]
 
* [[Music of Colombia]]
 
* [[Carnival in Colombia]]
 
* [[Festivals in Colombia]]
 
* [[Iberoamerican Theater Festival]]
 
* [[List of universities in Colombia|Universities in Colombia]]
 
* [[Monuments and memorials in Colombia]]
 
* [[National symbols of Colombia]]
 
; People
 
* [[List of Colombians|List of Colombian people]]
 
* [[List of Colombian artists]]
 
* [[List of people on stamps of Colombia]]
 
{{col-break}}
 
; Entertainment
 
* [[Cinema of Colombia]]
 
* [[List of Colombian TV Shows]]
 
  
; Art-related
+
===Indigenous peoples===
* [[Fernando Botero]]'s museum ([[Medellín]] - [http://www.museodeantioquia.org Museo de Antioquia])
+
Before Spanish colonization of the region that would become Colombia, the territory was home to many different indigenous peoples. Today more than 50 different indigenous ethnic groups exist in Colombia. Most of them speak languages belonging to the Chibchan and Cariban linguistic families. The Colombian government has established 567 reserves for indigenous peoples, which are inhabited by more than 800,000 persons. Some of the largest indigenous groups are the [[Arhuacos]], the [[Muisca]], the [[Kuna]], the Witoto, the Páez, the Tucano, the Wayuu, and the Guahibo.
* Bank of Republic Collection ([[Bogotá]])
 
* [[Salón de Artistas Colombianos]]
 
  
; Museums
+
===Immigrant groups===
* [[Gold Museum]] ([[Bogotá]] downtown)
+
Because of its strategic location Colombia has received several immigration waves during its history. Most of these immigrants settled on the Caribbean coast; [[Barranquilla]] (the largest city on the Colombian Caribbean coast) has the largest population of [[Lebanese]], [[Jew]]ish, [[Italy|Italian]] and [[Gypsy|Roma]] descendants. There are also important communities of [[German]] and [[Chinese]] descendants in that region.
* [[Quimbaya museum]] ([[Armenia, Colombia|Armenia]], [[Quindío]])
 
* [[Archeological Museum of Pasca]] ([[Pasca]])
 
* San Felipe Castle ([[Cartagena, Colombia]])
 
* ''Museo Nacional'' ([[Colombian National Museum]], downtown [[Bogotá]])
 
  
; Food-related
+
===Ethnic groups===
* [[Colombian cuisine]]
+
The census data in Colombia do not take into account ethnicity, so percentages are basically estimates from other sources and can vary from one another. Statistics reveal that a majority of Colombians are the result of a mixture of Europeans, Africans, and Amerindians.
{{col-end}}
 
  
==Education==
+
There are 101 languages listed for Colombia in the Ethnologue database, of which 80 are spoken today, though most of the population speaks Spanish. There are about 500,000 speakers of indigenous languages in Colombia today.  
{{main|Education in Colombia}}
 
Over 93% of the entire population over 15 years of age can read and write, and this number has continued to increase throughout the years. Sixty percent of students complete primary schooling (5 years) and move onto secondary schooling(6 years). Most primary schools are private. Approximately 80 percent of Colombian children enter school, but they usually join a preschool academy until age 6 and then go to school. The school year extends from February to November in the capital city while in many other cities it extends from August to June. [[Primary education]] is free and [[compulsory education|compulsory]] for nine years for children between 6 and 12 years of age. The net primary enrollment (percentage of relevant age-group) in 2001 was 86.7 percent. The completion rate (percentage of age-group) for children attending elementary school (primaria) in 2001 totaled 89.5 percent. In many rural areas, teachers are poorly qualified, and only five years of primary school are offered. [[Secondary education]] (educación media) begins at age 11 and lasts up to six years, without any opportunity for [[vocational training]]. Secondary-school graduates are awarded the diploma (high-school diploma). Net secondary enrollment in 2001 was 53.5 percent. School life expectancy in 2001 was 11.1 years. Total public spending as a percentage of [[gross domestic product]] (GDP) in 2001 was 4.4 percent—one of the highest rates in Latin America—as compared with 2.5 percent at the end of the 1980s. Government expenditures on education in 1999 totaled 19.7 percent of total government spending. The ratio of pupils to teachers in 2001 in primary school was 26:1 and in secondary school, 19:2. Colombia has 24 public universities. A total of 92.5 percent of the population is literate (male: 92.4 percent; female: 92.6 percent), according to a 2003 estimate. [[Literacy]] is at 93 percent in urban areas, but only 67 percent in rural areas. People in Colombia are educated in Spanish (see also [[Colombian Spanish]]). The second most spoken language is English.
 
  
==Transportation==
+
===Religion===
[[Image:Tunel de Occidente.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Occidente tunnel, [[Antioquia Department|Antioquia]].]]
+
[[Image:CatedralPrimadaBogota2004-7.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Cathedral of Bogotá]]
{{main|Transportation in Colombia}}
+
The government does not collect [[religion|religious]] statistics, and accurate reports are hard to obtain. Based on various studies, more than 95 percent of the population adheres to [[Christianity]], most of them (81 to 90 percent) [[Roman Catholicism]]. About 1 percent practice indigenous religions. Under 1 percent practice [[Judaism]], [[Islam]], [[Hinduism]], and [[Buddhism]]. Despite strong numbers of adherents, around 60 percent of respondents to a poll by ''El Tiempo'' report that they do not practice their faith actively.
Colombia has a network of national highways maintained by the ''Instituto Nacional de Vías'' or INVIAS (National Institute of Roadways) government agency. The [[Pan-American Highway]] travels through Colombia, connecting the country with Venezuela to the east and Ecuador to the south.
 
  
Colombia's principal airport is [[El Dorado International Airport]] in [[Bogotá]]. Several national airlines ([[Avianca]], [[AeroRepública]], [[AIRES]] and [[SATENA]]), and international airlines (such as [[Iberia Airlines|Iberia]], [[American Airlines]], [[Varig]], [[Copa]], [[Continental]], [[Delta Air Lines|Delta]], [[Air Canada]], [[Air France]], [[Aerolineas Argentinas]], [[Aerogal]], [[TAME]], [[TACA]]) operate from El Dorado. Bogotá's airport is one of the largest and most expensive in Latin America. Because of its central location in Colombia and America, it is preferred by national land transportation providers, as well as national and international air transportation providers.
+
The Colombian constitution guarantees [[Freedom of religion|religious freedom]], but also states that the state "is not atheist or agnostic, nor indifferent to Colombians' religious sentiment." Religious groups are readily able to obtain recognition as organized associations, but some smaller ones face difficulty in obtaining recognition as religious entities, which is required to offer chaplaincy services in public facilities.
  
==Demographics==
+
===Crime===
{{main|Demographics of Colombia}}
+
Colombia has become notorious for its illicit drug production, [[kidnapping]]s, and murder rate. In the 1990s, it became the world's largest producer of [[cocaine]] and [[coca]] derivatives. Cultivation of coca in 2000 was estimated at {{convert|402782|acre|sqkm|0}}.
[[Image:Cartagena Beach.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Cartagena, Colombia|Cartagena]], one of the most popular tourist destinations in the country.]]
 
With approximately 43.6 million people in 2006,<ref name="CIA">[https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/co.html Colombia], '''The World Factbook''', U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, updated [[12 December]] [[2006]].</ref> Colombia is the third-most populous country in [[Latin America]], after [[Brazil]] and [[Mexico]].
 
  
Movement from rural to urban areas was very heavy in the mid-twentieth century, but has since tapered off. The urban population increased from 31% of the total population in 1938, to 57% in 1951 and about 70% by 1990. Currently the figure is about 77%. Thirty cities have a population of 100,000 or more. The nine eastern lowlands departments, constituting about 54% of Colombia's area, have less than 3% of the population and a density of less than one person per square kilometer (two persons per sq mi.). Colombia's total population in 2015 is projected to be more than 52 million.<ref>[http://hdr.undp.org/hdr2006/statistics/countries/data_sheets/cty_ds_COL.html Colombia], '''Human Development Report 2006''', United Nations Development Programme.</ref>
+
[[Drug cartels]] began utilizing terror to increase their bargaining power with the government. This resulted in homicide becoming the leading cause of death in the nation. For a number of years, it had the highest murder rate in the world at 62 murders per 100,000 people. However, it has declined in recent years to 39 murders per 100,000 people, below the level of [[South Africa]]. Over 90 percent of the murdered are males.  
  
The country has a diverse population that reflects its colourful history and the peoples that have populated here from ancient times to the present. The historic amalgam of the different main groups forms the basics of Colombia's current demographics: [[European ethnic groups|European]] immigrants, [[Indigenous peoples|Indigenous]] Natives, [[African]]s, Asians, Middle Easterners and other recent immigrants. Many of the indigenous peoples were absorbed into the [[mestizo]] population, but the remaining 700,000 currently represent over eighty-five distinct cultures. The European immigrants were primarily [[Spain|Spanish]] colonists, but a small number of other Europeans ([[Dutch people|Dutch]], [[German people|German]], [[French people|French]], [[Swiss]], [[Belgian]] and in smaller numbers Polish, Lithuanian, English and Croatian communities) immigrated during the Second World War and the [[Cold War]]. For example, former Bogotá mayor [[Antanas Mockus]] is the son of [[Lithuanian]] immigrants. Africans were brought as slaves, mostly to the coastal lowlands, beginning early in the sixteenth century, and continuing into the nineteenth century. After abolition, a national ideology of [[mestizaje]] encouraged the mixing of the [[Indigenous peoples in Colombia|indigenous]], European and Native Amerindian communities into a single mestizo ethnic identity.<ref>[http://isla.igc.org/SpecialRpts/SR2murillo.html El Choco: The African Heart of Colombia], Luis Gilberto Murillo Urrutia, speech given New York, [[February 23]], [[2001]]</ref> Other immigrant populations include Asians and Middle Easterners, particularly Lebanese, Jordanians, Syrians, Chinese, Japanese and Koreans.  
+
Coca cultivation is a major illegal business in Colombia. In several rural regions, large tracts of land have been used for coca plant cultivation. According to U.S. figures, in 2004 an estimated {{convert|281947|acre|sqkm|0}} of land were used to grow the plant, and the nation had a producing potential of 430,000 metric tons of cocaine per year.  
  
===Indigenous peoples===
+
In 2006, the Colombian government destroyed around {{convert|180387|acre|sqkm|0}}, beating all previous records in coca plant destruction. While Colombian efforts to eradicate the coca plant have displaced production, they have not diminished the area on which the crop is harvested.  
{{main|Indigenous peoples in Colombia}}
 
Before the Spanish colonization of the region that would become the country of Colombia, the territory was the home of many different [[indigenous peoples]]. Today more than fifty different indigenous ethnic groups exist in Colombia. Most of them speak languages beonging to the [[Chibcha]]n and [[Carib]]an linguistic families. The Colombian government has established 567 reserves for indigenous peoples and they are inhabitated by more than 800,000 persons. Some of the largest indigenous groups are the [[Arhuacos]], the [[Muisca]], the [[Kuna people]], the [[Witoto]], the [[Páez people|Páez]], the [[Tucano people|Tucano]], the [[Wayuu]] and the [[Guahibo]].
 
  
===Immigrant groups===
+
===Human rights situation===
{{main|Immigration to Colombia}}
+
The 42-year internal armed conflict continued between the government and [[terrorism|terrorist]] organizations, particularly the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the National Liberation Army (ELN). The United Self Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) was demobilized by August 2006, but renegade AUC members who did not demobilize, or who demobilized but later abandoned the peace process, remained the object of military action. While civilian authorities generally maintained effective control of the security forces, there were instances in which elements of the security forces acted in violation of state policy.
Because of its strategic location Colombia has received several immigration waves during its history. Most of these immigrants have settled in the Caribbean Coast; [[Barranquilla]] (the largest city in the Colombian Caribbean Coast) has the largest population of Lebanese, Jewish, Italian and Gypsy descendants. There are also important communities of German and Chinese descendants in the Caribbean Coast.
 
  
===Ethnic groups===
+
The following '''societal problems and governmental''' human rights abuses were reported during 2006: Unlawful and extrajudicial killings; forced disappearances; insubordinate military collaboration with criminal groups; torture and mistreatment of detainees; overcrowded and insecure prisons; arbitrary arrest; high number of pretrial detainees, some of whom were held with convicted prisoners; impunity; an inefficient judiciary subject to intimidation; harassment and intimidation of journalists; unhygienic conditions at settlements for displaced persons, with limited access to health care, education, or employment; corruption; harassment of human rights groups; violence against women, including rape; child abuse and child prostitution; trafficking in women and children for the purpose of sexual exploitation; societal discrimination against women, indigenous persons, and minorities; and illegal child labor.
The census data in Colombia does not take into account ethnicity, so percentages are basically estimates from other sources and can vary from one another. Statistics reveal that Colombians are predominantly Roman Catholic and overwhelmingly speakers of Spanish, and that a majority of them are the result of the a mixture of Europeans, Africans, Amerindians.
 
  
58% of the population is mestizo, or of mixed European and Amerindian ancestry, while 20% is of white European (usually Spanish) ancestry.  Another 14% is mulatto, or of mixed black African and white European ancestry, while 4% is of black African ancestry and 3% are zambos, of mixed black African and Amerindian ancestry.  Pure indigenous Amerindians comprise 1 percent of the population.<ref>{{cite web |title=Intute - World Guide - Colombia |url=http://www.intute.ac.uk/sciences/worldguide/html/856_people.html |accessdate= 2007-03-08}}</ref>  There are 101 languages listed for Colombia in the Ethnologue database, of which 80 are spoken today as living languages. There are about 500,000 speakers of indigenous languages in Colombia today.<ref name="ethnologue">[http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=Colombia The Languages of Colombia]</ref>
+
'''Illegal armed groups''' committed the majority of human rights violations. Despite a unilateral cease-fire declared by the AUC in 2002 and a nationwide demobilization, renegade paramilitary members committed the following criminal acts and human rights abuses: political killings and kidnappings; forced disappearances; torture; interference with personal privacy and with the political system; forced displacement; suborning and intimidation of judges, prosecutors, and witnesses; infringement on citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on freedom of movement; recruitment and employment of child soldiers; and harassment, intimidation, and killings of human rights workers, journalists, teachers, and trade unionists.
  
More than two-thirds of all Colombians live in urban areas—a figure significantly higher than the world average. The literacy rate (94 percent) in Colombia is also well above the world average, and the rate of population growth is slightly higher than the world average. Also, a large proportion of Colombians are young, largely because of recent decreases in the infant mortality rate. While 33 percent of the people are 14 years of age or younger, just 4 percent are aged 65 or older.
+
The '''FARC and ELN''' committed the following human rights violations: political killings; killings of off-duty members of the public security forces and local officials; kidnappings and forced disappearances; massive forced displacements; suborning and intimidation of judges, prosecutors, and witnesses; infringement on citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on freedom of movement; widespread recruitment of child soldiers; attacks against human rights activists; harassment, intimidation, and killings of teachers and trade unionists.
  
===Religion===
+
Representatives of the government, the ELN, civil society, and international observers continued meeting to explore a possible peace process and demobilization of the ELN. Government steps to improve the human rights and security situation showed demonstrable results.
{{main|Religion in Colombia}}
 
{{see also|Status of religious freedom in Colombia}}
 
The ''National Administrative Department of Statistics'' does not collect religious statistics, and accurate reports are hard to obtain. Based on various studies, more than 95% of the population adheres to [[Christianity]],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.religiousintelligence.co.uk/country/?CountryID=78 |title=Religious Intelligence - Country Profile: Colombia (Republic of Colombia) |accessdate=2007-10-03}}</ref> in which a huge segment of the population, between 81% and 90%, practices [[Roman Catholicism]]. About 1% of Colombians practice [[animism|indigenous religions]]. Under 1% practice [[Judaism]], [[Islam]], [[Hinduism]], and [[Buddhism]]. Despite strong numbers of adherents, around 60% of respondents to a poll by ''El Tiempo'' report that they do not practice their faith actively.<ref name="State">[http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2005/51632.htm International Religious Freedom Report 2005], by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, U.S. Department of State, [[November 8]], [[2005]].</ref>
 
  
The Colombian constitution guarantees religious freedom, but also states that the State "is not atheist or agnostic, nor indifferent to Colombians' religious sentiment." Religious groups are readily able to obtain recognition as organized associations, but some smaller ones face difficulty in obtaining recognition as religious entities, which is required to offer chaplaincy services in public facilities.<ref name="State"/>
+
==Culture==
{| class="wikitable"
+
[[Image:Venta de artesnias en raquira, 2006.JPG|thumb|left|400px|Arts and crafts in the town of Ráquira, Boyacá Department.]]
|-
+
Due in part to geography, Colombian [[culture]] has been heavily fragmented into five major cultural regions. Rural to urban migration and [[globalization]] have changed how many Colombians live and express themselves as large cities become melting pots of people (many of whom are [[refugee]]s from various provinces fleeing fighting that has hit Colombia throughout its violent history). Most recent is the displacement to cities and other countries caused by the Colombian armed conflict.
| [[Image:P1050225.JPG|thumb|center|250px|[[Las Lajas Cathedral]] in [[Nariño Department|Nariño]].]]
 
| [[Image:CatedralPrimadaBogota2004-7.jpg|thumb|center|250px|Cathedral of [[Bogotá]].]]
 
| [[Image:Catedral de sal - Adan.JPG|thumb|center|250px|[[Salt Cathedral of Zipaquirá|Salt Cathedral]] in the town of [[Zipaquirá]], [[Cundinamarca]].]]
 
|}
 
  
===Crime===
+
===Education===
{{see also|Security issues in Colombia|Human rights in Colombia}}
+
Over 93 percent of the entire population over 15 years of age can read and write, and this number continues to increase. But while [[literacy]] is at 93 percent in urban areas, only 67 percent in rural areas are literate. The [[language]] of instruction is [[Spanish language|Spanish]].  
Colombia has become notorious for its illicit drug production, kidnappings, and murder rate. In the 1990s, it became the world's largest producer of [[cocaine]] and [[coca]] derivatives.<ref name=nationmaster /> Cultivation of coca in 2000 was estimated at {{convert|402782|acre|sqkm|0}}.<ref name="UNest">{{cite web |author= |year=[[June 20]], [[2006]] |url=http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/press_release_2006-06-20.html |title=Coca cultivation in Andes stabilizes in 2005, farmers need help to find alternative livelihoods |work=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime |accessdate=December 29 |accessyear=2006}}</ref>
 
  
For some time Colombia also had the highest murder rate in the world at 62 murders per 100,000 people.<ref name="nationmaster">[http://www.nationmaster.com/red/country/co-colombia/cri-crime&all=1 Colombian Crime Statistics (1990s)]</ref> However, it has descended in recent years to 39 murders per 100,000 people, bringing it down in the [[List of countries by murder rate]] below the levels of South Africa. Over 90 percent of the murdered are males. Regions like Putumayo, Guaviare and Arauca remain at 100 or more murders per 100,000 inhabitants in 2005.  Neighbouring Venezuela, meanwhile, has seen a rise from 13 in 1991 to 33 murders per 100,000 inhabitants in 2005 and Ecuador has gone from 11 in 1991 to 18 in 2004.
+
Sixty percent of students complete primary schooling (five years) and move on to secondary schooling (six years). Primary [[education]] is free and compulsory for nine years for children between 6 and 12 years of age. In many rural areas, teachers are poorly qualified and only five years of primary school are offered.
  
Between 1992 and 1999 a total of 5,181 kidnappings, two-thirds of the world's reported, occurred in Colombia.<ref name="nationmaster"/>
+
Colombia has 24 public [[University|universities]].
In the year 2005, 800 kidnappings were reported, (73% less than in 2002) of which 35% were rescued in the same year. In 2005, 18,960 vehicles were stolen (37% less than in 2002) and 18,111 persons were murdered (38% less than in 2002).<ref name="Policia Nacional">[http://www.policia.gov.co/inicio/portal/unidades/dijin.nsf/paginas/RevistadeCriminalidad2005 Colombian Crime Statistics(2005)]</ref>
 
  
Coca cultivation is a major illegal business in Colombia. In several rural regions, large tracts of land have been used for coca plant cultivation. According to U.S. figures, in 2004 an estimated {{convert|281947|acre|sqkm|0}} of land were used to grow the plant, and the nation had a producing potential of 430,000 metric tons of cocaine per year.<ref name="CIA"/> According to a [[United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime]] survey, coca cultivation was estimated at {{convert|212511|acre|sqkm|0}} in December 2006.<ref name="UNest">{{cite web |author= |year=[[June 20]], [[2006]] |url=http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/press_release_2006-06-20.html |title=Coca cultivation in Andes stabilizes in 2005, farmers need help to find alternative livelihoods |work=United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime |accessdate=December 29 |accessyear=2006}}</ref>
+
==Transportation==
 +
[[Image:Tunel de Occidente.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Occidente tunnel, Antioquia.]]
 +
Colombia has a network of national highways. The [[Pan-American Highway]] travels through Colombia, connecting the country with [[Venezuela]] to the east and [[Ecuador]] to the south. Colombia's principal airport is El Dorado International Airport in Bogotá. Several national and international airlines operate from El Dorado. Bogotá's airport is one of the largest and most expensive in Latin America. Because of its central location in Colombia and the Americas, it is preferred by national land transportation providers, as well as national and international air transportation providers.
  
In the year of 2006 the Colombian government had destroyed around {{convert|180387|acre|sqkm|0}} beating all records in coca plant destruction. The Colombian government now plans to destroy around {{convert|123553|acre|sqkm|0}} of coca plants in 2007 and they claim there will be only around {{convert|49421|acre|sqkm|0}} left, which they claim will be destroyed in 2008.<ref name="Colombian Government">[http://www.presidencia.gov.co/prensa_new/sne/2007/enero/03/17032007.htm Colombian coca destruction(2007)]</ref> While Colombian efforts to eradicate the coca plant have displaced production, they have not diminished the area on which the crop is harvested.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ciponline.org/colombia/040325ondc.htm |title=Press release from White House Office of National Drug Control Policy - "2004 Coca and Opium Poppy Estimates for Colombia and the Andes," March 25, 2005 |accessdate=2007-10-03}}</ref>This disputes the Colombian claim that coca will be eradicated in 2008.
+
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
===Human rights situation===
+
==References==
[[Amnesty International]] summarizes in its Annual Report 2006: "Although the number of killings and kidnappings in some parts of the country fell, serious human rights abuses committed by all parties to the conflict remained at critical levels. Of particular concern were reports of [[extrajudicial executions]] carried out by the security forces, killings of civilians by armed opposition groups and paramilitaries, and the forced displacement of civilian communities. More than 3.5 million civilians out of the country’s 40 million people have been displaced during the last two decades, according to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre.<ref>http://www.internal-displacement.org/countries/Colombia "Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), Colombia</ref>
+
* Academia Colombiana de Historia. ''Historia extensa de Colombia'' (41 volúmenes). Bogotá: Ediciones Lerner, 1965-1986. ISBN 9589501338 (Obra completa)
 
+
* Buckman, Robert T. ''Latin America.'' World Today Series. Harpers Ferry, WV: Stryker-Post Publications, 2006. ISBN 1887985751
"More than 55 percent of those displaced are women. Sexual violence, from which women can experience unwanted pregnancies, often results when women are displaced. The victims, as reported by Ms. Magazine, have sometimes resorted to illegal abortions. But abortion has now been legalized in Colombia in cases of rape, incest and when the mother's health is endangered.<ref>http://www.msmagazine.com/winter2007/newrights.asp "New Rights, Old Wrongs." Ms. Magazine, Winter 2007.</ref>
+
* Bushnell, David. ''The Making of Modern Colombia: A Nation in Spite of Itself.'' University of California Press, 1993. ISBN 978-0520082892
 
+
* Cadavid Misas, Roberto. ''Cursillo de historia de Colombia: de la conquista a la independencia.'' Bogotá: Intermedio Editores, 2004. ISBN 9587091345
According to Amnesty International, "Paramilitaries who had supposedly demobilized under the terms of a controversial law ratified in July continued to commit human rights violations, while armed opposition groups continued to commit serious and widespread breaches of international humanitarian law. Individuals who may have been responsible for [[war crimes]] and [[crimes against humanity]] were not brought to justice."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://web.amnesty.org/report2006/col-summary-eng |title=Colombia - Amnesty International |accessdate=2007-10-03}}</ref> Known as the Peace and Justice Law, Decree 128 provides legal and economic benefits to demobilized paramilitaries.  Supposedly, 25,000 paramilitary members are taking advantage of this 2005 law; however, Amnesty International believes that some have concealed their paramilitary activities by using different names or acting as civilian informers and civic guards.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.amnestyusa.org/Colombia/Justice_and_Peace_Law_and_Decree_128/page.do?id=1101862&n1=3&n2=30&n3=885 |title=Justice and Peace Law and Decree 128 |accessdate=2007-10-03}}</ref>
+
* Calderón Schrader, Camilo; Gil, Antonio; Torras, Daniel. ''Enciclopedia de Colombia'' (4 volúmenes). Barcelona: céano Grupo Editorial, 2001. ISBN 8449419476 (Obra completa)
 
+
* Calderón Schrader, Camilo. ''Gran enciclopedia de Colombia'' (11 volúmenes). Bogotá: Círculo de Lectores, 1993. ISBN 9582802944 (obra completa)
==See also==
+
* Cavelier Gaviria, Germán. ''Centenario de Panamá: una historia de la separación de Colombia en 1903.'' Bogotá: Universidad Externado de Colombia, 2003. ISBN 9586167186
{{portal}}
+
* Chasteen, John Charles. ''Born in Blood and Fire: A Concise History of Latin America.'' New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2001. ISBN 0393050483
* [[Afro-Colombian]]
+
* Gómez Hoyos, Rafael. ''La independencia de Colombia''. Madrid: Editorial Mapfre, Colecciones Mapfre, 1992. ISBN 8471005964
* [[Colombian Armed Conflict]]
+
* Hernández de Alba, Guillermo. ''Como nació la República de Colombia.'' Colección Bolsilibros. Bogotá: Academia Colombiana de Historia, 2004. ISBN 9588040353
* [[Communications in Colombia]]
+
* Jaramillo Uribe, Jaime; Tirado Mejía, Álvaro; Calderón Schrader, Camilo. ''Nueva historia de Colombia'' (12 volúmenes). Bogotá: Planeta Colombiana Editorial, 2000. ISBN 9586142515 (Obra completa)
* [[Departments of Colombia]]
+
* Markham, Lois. ''Colombia: The Gateway to South America.'' New York: Marshall Cavendish, 1997. ISBN 0761401407
* [[Education in Colombia]]
+
* Morrison, Marion. ''Colombia.'' New York: Grolier Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0516211064
* [[Foreign relations of Colombia]]
+
* Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo. ''Colombia indígena.'' Medellín: Hola Colina, 1998. ISBN 9586382761
* [[Military of Colombia]]
+
* Streissguth, Tom. ''Colombia in Pictures.'' Minneapolis, MN: Lerner Publications, 2004. ISBN 0822509334
* [[Water supply and sanitation in Colombia]]
 
* [[List of Colombians]]
 
* [[Happy Planet Index]] - in which Colombia ranks number two (by 2007)
 
* [[LGBT rights in Colombia]]
 
 
 
==Bibliography==
 
===Internet===
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
 
 
===Books===
 
* Academia Colombiana de Historia (1986), ''Historia extensa de Colombia'' (41 volúmenes). Bogotá: Ediciones Lerner, 1965-1986. ISBN 9589501338 (Obra completa)
 
* Barrios, Luis (1984), ''Historia de Colombia''. Quinta edición, Bogotá: Editorial Cultural
 
* Bedoya F., Víctor A. (1944), ''Historia de Colombia: independencia y república con bases fundamentales en la colonia''. Colección La Salle, Bogotá: Librería Stella
 
* Bushnell, David (1996), ''Colombia una nación a pesar de sí misma: de los tiempos precolombinos a nuestros días''. Bogotá: Planeta Editores. ISBN 9586144879
 
* Caballero Argaez, Carlos (1987), ''50 años de economía: de la crisis del treinta a la del ochenta''. Segunda edición, Colección Jorge Ortega Torres, Bogotá: Editorial Presencia, Asociación Bancaria de Colombia. ISBN 9589040039
 
* Cadavid Misas, Roberto (2004), ''Cursillo de historia de Colombia: de la conquista a la independencia''. Bogotá: Intermedio Editores. ISBN 9587091345
 
* Calderón Schrader, Camilo; Gil, Antonio; Torras, Daniel (2001), ''Enciclopedia de Colombia'' (4 volúmenes). Barcelona: céano Grupo Editorial, 2001. ISBN 8449419476 (Obra completa)
 
* Calderón Schrader, Camilo (1993), ''Gran enciclopedia de Colombia'' (11 volúmenes). Bogotá: Círculo de Lectores. ISBN 9582802944 (obra completa)
 
* Cavelier Gaviria, Germán (2003), ''Centenario de Panamá: una historia de la separación de Colombia en 1903''. Bogotá: Universidad Externado de Colombia. ISBN 9586167186
 
* Forero, Manuel José (1946), ''Historia analítica de Colombia desde los orígenes de la independencia nacional''. Segunda edición, Bogotá: Librería Voluntad.
 
* Gómez Hoyos, Rafael (1992), ''La independencia de Colombia''. Madrid: Editorial Mapfre, Colecciones Mapfre 1492. ISBN 8471005964
 
* Granados, Rafael María (1978), ''Historia general de Colombia: prehistoria, conquista, colonia, independencia y Repúbica''. Octava edición, Bogotá: Imprenta Departamental Antonio Nariño.
 
* Hernández de Alba, Guillermo (2004), ''Como nació la República de Colombia''. Colección Bolsilibros. Bogotá: Academia Colombiana de Historia. ISBN 9588040353
 
* Hernández Becerra, Augusto (2001), ''Ordenamiento y desarreglo territorial en Colombia''. Bogotá: Universidad Externado de Colombia, ISBN 9586165558
 
* Hernández Rodríguez, Guillermo (1949), ''De los chibchas a la colonia y a la república''. Bogotá: Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Sección de Extensión Cultural.
 
* Jaramillo Uribe, Jaime; Tirado Mejía, Álvaro; Calderón Schrader, Camilo (2000), ''Nueva historia de Colombia'' (12 volúmenes). Bogotá: Planeta Colombiana Editorial. ISBN 9586142515 (Obra completa)
 
* Ocampo López, Javier (1999), ''El proceso ideológico de la emancipación en Colombia''. Colección La Línea de Horizonte, Bogotá: Editorial Planeta. ISBN 9586147924
 
* Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo (1998), ''Colombia indígena''. Medellín: Hola Colina. ISBN 9586382761
 
* Restrepo, José Manuel (1974), ''Historia de la revolución de la República de Colombia''. Medellín: Editorial Bedout.
 
* Rivadeneira Vargas, Antonio José (2002), ''Historia constitucional de Colombia 1510-2000''. Tunja: Editorial Bolivariana Internacional. Tercera edición.
 
* Tovar Pinzón, Hermes (1975), ''El movimiento campesino en Colombia durante los siglos XIX y XX''. Bogotá : Ediciones Libres, segunda edición.
 
* Trujillo Muñoz Augusto (2001), ''Descentralización, regionalización y autonomía local''. Bogotá: Universidad Nacional de Colombia.
 
* Vidal Perdomo Jaime (2001), ''La Región en la Organización Territorial del Estado''. Bogotá: Universidad del Rosario.
 
*[[Central Intelligence Agency]]: ''[[The World Factbook]]''. 2005.
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{sisterlinks|Colombia}}
+
All links retrieved January 7, 2024.
 
 
'''Government'''
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.gobiernoenlinea.gov.co/ Portal del Estado] - Colombia Online Portal
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.presidencia.gov.co/ Presidencia de la República de Colombia] - President
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.mincomercio.gov.co/ Ministerio de Comercio, Industria y Turismo]
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.unicef.org.co/ UNICEF en Colombia]
 
* [http://www.banrep.gov.co/engroot/home4.htm Banco de la República] - Central Bank
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.dane.gov.co/ Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadistica] - Statistics
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.invias.gov.co/invias/index.php Instituto Nacional de Vías] - Transport and Road Agency
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.senado.gov.co Senate of Colombia]
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.camara.gov.co Colombia's House of representatives]
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.ramajudicial.gov.co Colombia's Judicial branch]
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.policia.gov.co/ Policia Nacional] - Police
 
* [http://www.armada.mil.co/english/ Armada Nacional de Colombia] - Navy
 
* [http://www.ejercito.mil.co/english/ Ejército Nacional de Colombia] - Army
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.das.gov.co/ Departamento Administrativo de Seguridad] - Homeland Security
 
  
'''Other'''
+
* {{es icon}} [https://petro.presidencia.gov.co/ Presidencia de la República de Colombia] - President
* {{es icon}} [http://www.bvc.com.co/bvcweb/mostrarpagina.jsp?codpage=1 Colombian Stock Exchange]
+
* {{es icon}} [https://www.unicef.org/colombia/ UNICEF en Colombia]
* [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Colombia Encyclopaedia Britannica ''Colombia''] Country Page
+
* [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/colombia/ Colombia] CIA ''World Factbook''
* [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/co.html CIA World Factbook - ''Colombia'']
+
* [https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-12447532 Q&A: Colombia's civil conflict] ''BBC News''
* {{es icon}} [http://www.mapas.com.co - ''Maps of Colombia''] - Major Cities Maps
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.elcolombiano.net/ El Colombiano] Website for U.S. Weekly Newspaper Serving Colombian-American and Hispanic communities in South Florida
 
* {{es icon}} [http://dnarte.com - Web Directory of Artists and Cultural institutions from Colombia]
 
* [http://www.idpvoices.org/ IDP Voices] - website that lets Colombia's displaced people tell their life stories in their own words
 
* {{wikitravel}}
 
  
  
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Latest revision as of 22:37, 7 January 2024

República de Colombia
Republic of Colombia
Flag of Colombia Coat of arms of Colombia
Motto"Libertad y Orden" (Spanish)
"Freedom and Order"
Anthem: ¡Oh, Gloria Inmarcesible! (Spanish)
O unfading glory!

Location of Colombia
Capital
(and largest city)
Bogotá
4°39′N 74°3′W
Official languages Spanish1
Recognized regional languages The 72 languages and dialects of ethnic groups are also official in their regions.[1]
Ethnic groups  87.6% White or Mestizo
6.8% Afro-Colombians (includes Mulatto, Raizal, and Palenquero)
4.3% Amerindian
1.4% Unspecified[2]
Demonym Colombian
Government Unitary presidential republic
 -  President Gustavo Petro
 -  Vice President Francia Márquez
Independence from Spain 
 -  Declared July 20, 1810 
 -  Recognized August 7, 1819 
 -  Current constitution 1991 
Area
 -  Total 1,141,748 km² (26th)
440,831 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) 8.8 (17th)
Population
 -  2021 estimate 50,355,650[2] (29th)
 -  Density 42.23/km² (173rd)
105.72/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2022 estimate
 -  Total Green Arrow Up (Darker).png$940.589 billion[3] (32nd)
 -  Per capita Green Arrow Up (Darker).png$18,225[3] (84th)
GDP (nominal) 2022 estimate
 -  Total Green Arrow Up (Darker).png$351.281 billion[3] (43rd)
 -  Per capita Green Arrow Up (Darker).png$6,806[3] (97th)
Gini (2020) 54.2[4] 
Currency Peso (COP)
Time zone (UTC-52)
Internet TLD .co
Calling code [[++57]]
1 Although the Colombian Constitution specifies Spanish as the official language in all its territory, the native languages (approximately 88 dialects) are also official in the whole country.
2 The official Colombian time, is controlled and coordinated by the state agency Superintendency of Industry and Commerce.[5]

Colombia, officially the Republic of Colombia, is a country located in the northwestern region of South America. It is bordered to the east by Venezuela and Brazil, to the south by Ecuador and Peru, to the north by the Atlantic Ocean (through the Caribbean Sea), and to the west by Panama and the Pacific Ocean. It is the only South American country with both Atlantic and Pacific coasts.

Colombia is the 26th largest nation in the world and the fourth-largest country in South America (after Brazil, Argentina, and Peru), with an area more than twice that of France.

The country suffers from low-intensity conflicts involving rebel guerrilla groups, paramilitary militias, drug traffickers, and corruption. The conflict originated around 1964-1966, when the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the National Liberation Army (ELN) were founded and began their guerrilla insurgency campaigns against successive Colombian government administrations.

The word "Colombia" comes from the name of Christopher Columbus (Cristóbal Colón in Spanish, Cristoforo Colombo in Italian). Originally a reference to the New World, especially to all American territories and colonies under Spanish and Portuguese rule, the name was adopted by the Republic of Colombia of 1819 formed by the union of Venezuela, New Granada, and Ecuador.

In 1830, when Venezuela and Ecuador separated, the region that remained became a new country: The Republic of New Granada. In 1863 New Granada changed its name to United States of Colombia, and in 1886 adopted its present name: Republic of Colombia.

Geography

Beauty in a Colombian flower.

Colombia has more physical diversity packed into its borders than any other area of comparable size in Latin America. The country is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire, a region of the world characterized by frequent earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.

Colombian surface features form complicated patterns. The western third of the country is the most complex. Starting at the shore of the Pacific Ocean in the west and moving eastward, a diverse sequence of features is encountered. In the extreme west are the very narrow and discontinuous Pacific coastal lowlands, which are backed by the Serranía de Baudó, the lowest and narrowest of Colombia's mountain ranges. Next is the broad region of the Río Atrato/Río San Juan lowland, which has been proposed as a possible alternate to the Panama Canal as a man-made route between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

The chief western mountain range, the Cordillera Occidental, is a moderately high range with peaks reaching up to about 13,000 ft (4,000 m). The Cauca River Valley, an important agricultural region with several large cities on its borders, separates the Cordillera Occidental from the massive Cordillera Central. Several snow-clad volcanoes in the Cordillera Central have summits that rise above 18,000 ft (5,500 m). The valley of the slow-flowing and muddy Magdalena River, a major transportation artery, separates the Cordillera Central from the main eastern range, the Cordillera Oriental. The peaks of the Cordillera Oriental are moderately high. This range differs from Colombia's other mountain ranges in that it contains several large basins. In the east, the sparsely populated, flat to gently rolling eastern lowlands called llanos cover almost 60 percent of the country's total land area.

This cross section of the republic does not include two of Colombia's regions: the Caribbean coastal lowlands and the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, both in the northern part of the country. The lowlands in the west are mostly swampy; the reed-filled marshes of the area are called ciénagas. The Guajira Peninsula in the east is semiarid. The Sierra Nevada is a spectacular triangular snowcapped block of rock that towers over the eastern part of this lowland.

Climate

Mountain climate is one of the unique features of the Andes and other high altitude reliefs

Colombia's proximity to the equator influences its climates. The lowland areas are continuously hot, but altitude greatly affects temperature. Mountain climate is one of the unique features of the Andes and other high altitude reliefs where climate is determined by elevation. Below 1,000 meters (3,281 ft) in elevation is the warm altitudinal zone, where temperatures are above 24 °C (75.2 °F). About 82.5 percent of the country's total area lies in the warm altitudinal zone. The temperate climate altitudinal zone located between 1,001 and 2,000 meters (3,284 and 6,562 ft) is characterized for presenting an average temperature ranging between 17 and 24 °C (62.6 and 75.2 °F). The cold climate is present between 2,001 and 3,000 meters (6,565 and 9,843 ft) and the temperatures vary between 12 and 17 °C (53.6 and 62.6 °F). Beyond lies the alpine conditions of the forested zone and then the treeless grasslands of the páramos. Above 4,000 meters (13,123 ft), where temperatures are below freezing, the climate is glacial, a zone of permanent snow and ice.

Rainfall varies by location in Colombia, tending to increase as one travels southward. This is especially true in the eastern lowlands. For example, rainfall in parts of the Guajira Peninsula seldom exceeds 30 in (75 cm) per year. Colombia's rainy southeast, however, is often drenched by more than 200 in (500 cm) of rain per year. Rainfall in most of the rest of the country lies between these two extremes.

Vegetation

A coffee farmer meticulously sorts coffee beans near Armenia, Quindío.

Altitude affects not only temperature but also vegetation. In fact, altitude is one of the most important influences on vegetation patterns in Colombia. The mountainous parts of the country can be divided into several vegetation zones according to altitude, although the altitude limits of each zone may vary somewhat depending on the latitude.

The "tierra caliente" (hot land), below 3,300 ft (1,000 m), is the zone of tropical crops such as bananas. The tierra templada (temperate land), extending from an altitude of 3,300 to 6,600 ft (1,000 to 2,000 m), is the zone of coffee and maize.

Wheat and potatoes dominate in the "tierra fría" (cold land), at altitudes from 6,600 to 10,500 ft (2,000 to 3,200 m). In the "zona forestada" (forested zone), which is located between 10,500 and 12,800 ft (3,200 and 3,900 m), many of the trees have been cut for firewood. Treeless pastures dominate the páramos, or alpine grasslands, at altitudes of 12,800 to 15,100 ft (3,900 to 4,600 m). Above 15,100 ft (4,600 m), where temperatures are below freezing, is the "tierra helada," a zone of permanent snow and ice.

Vegetation also responds to rainfall patterns. A scrub woodland of scattered trees and bushes dominates the semiarid northeast. To the south, savanna (tropical grassland) vegetation covers the Colombian portion of the llanos. The rainy areas in the southeast are blanketed by tropical rainforest. In the mountains, the spotty patterns of precipitation in alpine areas complicate vegetation patterns. The rainy side of a mountain may be lush and green, while the other side, in the rain shadow, may be parched.

History

Pre-Columbian era

The Zipa used to cover his body in gold and, from his raft, offered treasures to the Guatavita goddess in the middle of the sacred lake. This Muisca tradition became the origin of the El Dorado legend.

The first humans are believed to have arrived in the area from Central America about 20,000 B.C.E. Circa 10,000 B.C.E., hunter-gatherer societies existed near present-day Bogotá that traded with one another and with cultures living in the Magdalena River Valley.[6] Further waves of Mesoamericans—indigenous peoples of Central America—arrived between 1,200 and 500 B.C.E. and introduced maize. The Chibcha people came from present-day Nicaragua and Honduras between 400 and 300 B.C.E. They grew potatoes, corn, and other crops; developed irrigation systems; mined emeralds and salt; and built roads and suspension bridges.

Within Colombia, the two cultures with the most complex power structures were the Tayronas on the Caribbean coast and the Muiscas in the highlands around Bogotá, both of which were of the Chibcha language family. The Muisca people are considered to have had one of the most developed political systems in South America, after the Incas.[7]

Colonial era

Spanish explorers made the first exploration of the Caribbean littoral in 1500 led by Rodrigo de Bastidas. Christopher Columbus navigated near the Caribbean in 1502. In 1508, Vasco Nuñez de Balboa began the conquest of the territory through the region of Urabá. In 1513, he was also the first European to discover the Pacific Ocean, which he called Mar del Sur (or "Sea of the South") and which in fact would bring the Spaniards to Peru and Chile.

In 1510, the first European city in the Americas was founded, Santa María la Antigua del Darién. The territory's main population was made up of hundreds of tribes of the Chibchan and "Carib," currently known as the Caribbean people, whom the Spaniards conquered through warfare. Resulting disease, exploitation, and the conquest itself caused a tremendous demographic reduction among the indigenous peoples. In the sixteenth century, Europeans began to bring slaves from Africa.

Independence from Spain

Francisco de Paula Santander, Simón Bolivar, and other heroes of the Independence of Colombia in the Congress of Cúcuta.

Since the beginning of the periods of conquest and colonization, there were several rebel movements under Spanish rule, most of them either being crushed or remaining too weak to change the overall situation. The last one, which sought outright independence from Spain, sprang up around 1810, following the independence of St. Domingue in 1804 (present-day Haiti), which provided a degree of support to the eventual leaders of this rebellion: Simón Bolívar and Francisco de Paula Santander, who became the first two presidents of Colombia. The rebellion finally succeeded in 1819, when the territory of the Viceroyalty of New Granada became the Republic of Greater Colombia, organized as a confederation along with Ecuador and Venezuela (Panama was part of Colombia).

Political struggle

Internal political and territorial divisions led to the secession of Venezuela and Quito (today's Ecuador) in 1830. At this time, the name New Granada was adopted, which it kept until 1856 when it became the Grenadine Confederation. After a two-year civil war, in 1863, the United States of Colombia was created, lasting until 1886, when the country finally became known as the Republic of Colombia.

Internal divisions remained, occasionally igniting bloody civil wars, the most significant being the Thousand Days civil war (1899-1902). U.S. intentions to build the Panama Canal led to the separation of Panama in 1903 and its establishment as a separate nation. Colombia was also engulfed in a year-long war with Peru over a territorial dispute involving the Amazonas Department and its capital Leticia.

La Violencia

Soon after Colombia achieved a relative degree of political stability, which was interrupted by a bloody conflict that took place between the late 1940s and the early 1950s, a period known as La Violencia ("The Violence"). Its cause was mounting tensions between the two leading political parties, which ignited after the assassination of the Liberal presidential candidate on April 9, 1948. This assassination caused riots in Bogotá. The violence spread throughout the country and claimed the lives of at least 180,000 Colombians. From 1953 to 1964 the violence between the two political parties decreased, first when Gustavo Rojas deposed the president in a coup d'etat and negotiated with the guerrillas, and then under the military junta of General Gabriel París Gordillo.

The National Front

The two main political parties—the Conservative Party and Liberal Party—agreed to create a coalition government. The presidency would alternate between parties every four years; the parties would have parity in all other elective offices. The National Front ended "La Violencia" and attempted to institute far-reaching social and economic reforms in cooperation with the Alliance for Progress. In the end, the contradictions between each successive Liberal and Conservative administration made the results decidedly mixed. Despite progress in certain sectors, many social and political injustices continued. Guerrilla movements including FARC, ELN, and M-19 were created to fight the government and political apparatus.

Colombian armed conflict

Poster of Ingrid Beancourt in Paris, France, on the fifth anniversary (February 2007) of her kidnapping by FARC.

During the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s and 1990s, powerful and violent drug cartels emerged, mainly the Medellín Cartel (under the command of Pablo Escobar) and the Cali Cartel, which exerted political, economic, and social influence in Colombia during this period. These cartels also financed and influenced different illegally armed groups across the political spectrum.

To replace the previous 1886 constitution, a new constitution was ratified in 1991 that included key provisions on political, ethnic, human, and gender rights, which have been gradually put in practice, though uneven developments, surrounding controversies, and setbacks have persisted. The new constitution also initially prohibited the extradition of Colombian nationals to the United States. The drug cartels were accused of lobbying in favor of this prohibition and carried out a violent campaign against extradition that included terrorist attacks and mafia-style executions. Drug cartels attempted to influence the government and the political structure of Colombia by means of corruption.

In recent decades, the country has continued to be plagued by the effects of the influential drug trade, guerrilla insurgencies like FARC, and paramilitary groups such as the AUC (later demobilized, though paramilitarism remains active), which, along with other minor factions, have engaged in a bloody internal armed conflict.

Analysts claimed that the drug cartels helped the Colombian trade balance through a steady and substantial influx of foreign currency, mainly U.S. dollars, though other negative economic and social effects also resulted. The drug lords have also destabilized the government.

The different irregular groups often resort to kidnapping and drug smuggling to fund their causes. They tend to operate in the remote rural countryside and can sometimes disrupt communications and travel between regions. Colombia's most famous hostage, especially internationally, was Ingrid Betancourt, a former senator and presidential candidate known as an outspoken and daring anti-corruption activist. She was kidnapped by FARC in 2002, while campaigning for the presidency and was finally rescued by the government in 2008.

Since the early 1980s, attempts at reaching a negotiated settlement between the government and different rebel groups have been made, either failing or achieving only the partial demobilization of some of the parties involved. One of the latest such attempts was made during the administration of President Andrés Pastrana, which negotiated with the FARC between 1998 and 2002.

In the late 1990s, President Andrés Pastrana implemented an initiative named Plan Colombia, with the dual goal of ending the armed conflict and promoting a strong anti-narcotic strategy. The most controversial element of the Plan, which as implemented also included a smaller number of funds for institutional and alternative development, was considered to be its anti-narcotic strategy, consisting of an increase in aerial fumigations to eradicate coca. This activity came under fire from several sectors, which claimed that fumigation also damaged legal crops and has adverse health effects for populations exposed to the herbicides. Critics of the initiative also claim that the plan represents a military approach to problems that have their roots in the social inequalities of the country, and that it causes coca farmers to clear new fields for crops deeper within jungle areas, significantly increasing the rate of deforestation.

During the presidency of Álvaro Uribe, who was elected on the promise of applying military pressure on the FARC and other criminal groups, some security indicators have improved, such as a decrease in reported kidnappings (from 3,700 in 2000 to 800 in 2005) and a decrease of more than 48 percent in homicides between July 2002 and May 2005. It is argued that these improvements have favored economic growth and tourism.

Uribe, who took office in August 2002, is a staunch U.S. ally whose country was the only one in South America to join the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq. He met President George Bush several times, most recently in May 2007.

Government

The National Capitol Building houses the Colombian Congress. Downtown Bogotá.
Executive branch
Colombia is a republic where the executive branch dominates the government structure. Until recently, the president was elected together with the vice president by popular vote for a single four-year term; he functioned as both head of government and head of state. However, on October 19, 2005, the Colombian Congress amended the constitution, which now allows Colombian presidents to serve two consecutive four-year terms. However, department governors, mayors of cities and towns, and other executive branch officials are only elected for a three-year term and cannot be immediately re-elected.

Legislative branch
Colombia's bicameral parliament consists of a 166-seat Chamber of Representatives and an 102-seat Senate. Members of both houses are elected by popular vote to serve four-year terms. Colombia also elects department deputies and city council members.
Judicial branch
In the 1990s, the Colombian judicial system underwent significant reforms and switched from an inquisitorial to an adversarial system. The judicial system is headed by the Constitutional Court and members are appointed by Congress out of nominations made by the president and other high-ranking tribunals.

Administrative divisions

Colombia is divided into 32 departments and one capital district. The departments are subdivided into 1,119 municipalities and have ten districts, the Old Four (Bogota, Barranquilla, Cartagena, and Santa Marta) and the New Six (Tunja, Cucuta, Popayan, Buenaventura, Tumaco, and Turbo).

Economy

After experiencing decades of steady growth (average GDP growth exceeded 4 percent in the 1970-1998 period), Colombia experienced a recession in 1999 (the first full year of negative growth since 1929), and the recovery from that recession was long and painful. Colombia's economy suffers from weak domestic and foreign demand, austere government budgets, and serious internal armed conflicts.

Colombia's main exports include manufactured goods, petroleum, coal , and coffee.

Colombia is also the largest exporter of plantains to the United States. Within Latin America, Colombia is known as a provider of fine lingerie, with the industry being centered in Medellín. All imports, exports, and the general trade balance are in record levels, and the inflow of export dollars has resulted in substantial revaluation of the Colombian peso.

The problems facing the country range from pension system problems to drug dealing to moderately high unemployment (12 percent). Several international financial institutions have praised the economic reforms introduced by current

Tourism

Rodadero Aquarium near Santa Marta.

Most tourists come to Colombia during the famous festivals, such as the Cali Fair, the Barranquilla Carnival, the Bogotá summer festival, the Iberoamerican Theater Festival, and the Flower Festival. Many people visit Colombia during the Christmas season and the celebrations surrounding independence day.

Even though Colombia has been plagued with travel advisories because of the activities of FARC and other guerrilla groups, it has continued to attract more tourists.

Demographics

Las Lajas Cathedral in Nariño.

Movement from rural to urban areas was very heavy in the mid-twentieth century but has since tapered off. The urban population increased from 31 percent of the total population in 1938 to 57 percent in 1951 and 70 percent by 1990. The nine eastern lowlands departments, constituting about 54 percent of Colombia's area, have less than 3 percent of the population and a density of less than two persons per square mile (one person per sq km).

The country has a diverse population that reflects its colorful history and the peoples that have lived there from ancient times to the present. The historic amalgam of the different main groups forms the basics of Colombia's current demographics: European immigrants, indigenous natives, Africans, Asians, Middle Easterners, and other recent immigrants. Many of the indigenous peoples were absorbed into the mestizo population, but the remaining 700,000 currently represent over 85 distinct cultures.

The European immigrants were primarily Spanish colonists, but a small number of other Europeans (Dutch, German, French, Swiss, Belgian, and in smaller numbers, Polish, Lithuanian, English, and Croatian communities) immigrated during World War II and the Cold War. For example, former Bogotá mayor Antanas Mockus is the son of Lithuanian immigrants.

Africans were brought as slaves, mostly to the coastal lowlands, beginning early in the sixteenth century and continuing into the nineteenth century. After abolition, a national ideology of mestizaje encouraged the mixing of the indigenous, European, and Native Amerindian communities into a single mestizo ethnic identity.[8] Other immigrant populations include Asians and Middle Easterners, particularly Lebanese, Jordanians, Syrians, Chinese, Japanese, and Koreans.

Indigenous peoples

Before Spanish colonization of the region that would become Colombia, the territory was home to many different indigenous peoples. Today more than 50 different indigenous ethnic groups exist in Colombia. Most of them speak languages belonging to the Chibchan and Cariban linguistic families. The Colombian government has established 567 reserves for indigenous peoples, which are inhabited by more than 800,000 persons. Some of the largest indigenous groups are the Arhuacos, the Muisca, the Kuna, the Witoto, the Páez, the Tucano, the Wayuu, and the Guahibo.

Immigrant groups

Because of its strategic location Colombia has received several immigration waves during its history. Most of these immigrants settled on the Caribbean coast; Barranquilla (the largest city on the Colombian Caribbean coast) has the largest population of Lebanese, Jewish, Italian and Roma descendants. There are also important communities of German and Chinese descendants in that region.

Ethnic groups

The census data in Colombia do not take into account ethnicity, so percentages are basically estimates from other sources and can vary from one another. Statistics reveal that a majority of Colombians are the result of a mixture of Europeans, Africans, and Amerindians.

There are 101 languages listed for Colombia in the Ethnologue database, of which 80 are spoken today, though most of the population speaks Spanish. There are about 500,000 speakers of indigenous languages in Colombia today.

Religion

Cathedral of Bogotá

The government does not collect religious statistics, and accurate reports are hard to obtain. Based on various studies, more than 95 percent of the population adheres to Christianity, most of them (81 to 90 percent) Roman Catholicism. About 1 percent practice indigenous religions. Under 1 percent practice Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism. Despite strong numbers of adherents, around 60 percent of respondents to a poll by El Tiempo report that they do not practice their faith actively.

The Colombian constitution guarantees religious freedom, but also states that the state "is not atheist or agnostic, nor indifferent to Colombians' religious sentiment." Religious groups are readily able to obtain recognition as organized associations, but some smaller ones face difficulty in obtaining recognition as religious entities, which is required to offer chaplaincy services in public facilities.

Crime

Colombia has become notorious for its illicit drug production, kidnappings, and murder rate. In the 1990s, it became the world's largest producer of cocaine and coca derivatives. Cultivation of coca in 2000 was estimated at 402,782 acres (1,630 km²).

Drug cartels began utilizing terror to increase their bargaining power with the government. This resulted in homicide becoming the leading cause of death in the nation. For a number of years, it had the highest murder rate in the world at 62 murders per 100,000 people. However, it has declined in recent years to 39 murders per 100,000 people, below the level of South Africa. Over 90 percent of the murdered are males.

Coca cultivation is a major illegal business in Colombia. In several rural regions, large tracts of land have been used for coca plant cultivation. According to U.S. figures, in 2004 an estimated 281,947 acres (1,141 km²) of land were used to grow the plant, and the nation had a producing potential of 430,000 metric tons of cocaine per year.

In 2006, the Colombian government destroyed around 180,387 acres (730 km²), beating all previous records in coca plant destruction. While Colombian efforts to eradicate the coca plant have displaced production, they have not diminished the area on which the crop is harvested.

Human rights situation

The 42-year internal armed conflict continued between the government and terrorist organizations, particularly the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the National Liberation Army (ELN). The United Self Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) was demobilized by August 2006, but renegade AUC members who did not demobilize, or who demobilized but later abandoned the peace process, remained the object of military action. While civilian authorities generally maintained effective control of the security forces, there were instances in which elements of the security forces acted in violation of state policy.

The following societal problems and governmental human rights abuses were reported during 2006: Unlawful and extrajudicial killings; forced disappearances; insubordinate military collaboration with criminal groups; torture and mistreatment of detainees; overcrowded and insecure prisons; arbitrary arrest; high number of pretrial detainees, some of whom were held with convicted prisoners; impunity; an inefficient judiciary subject to intimidation; harassment and intimidation of journalists; unhygienic conditions at settlements for displaced persons, with limited access to health care, education, or employment; corruption; harassment of human rights groups; violence against women, including rape; child abuse and child prostitution; trafficking in women and children for the purpose of sexual exploitation; societal discrimination against women, indigenous persons, and minorities; and illegal child labor.

Illegal armed groups committed the majority of human rights violations. Despite a unilateral cease-fire declared by the AUC in 2002 and a nationwide demobilization, renegade paramilitary members committed the following criminal acts and human rights abuses: political killings and kidnappings; forced disappearances; torture; interference with personal privacy and with the political system; forced displacement; suborning and intimidation of judges, prosecutors, and witnesses; infringement on citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on freedom of movement; recruitment and employment of child soldiers; and harassment, intimidation, and killings of human rights workers, journalists, teachers, and trade unionists.

The FARC and ELN committed the following human rights violations: political killings; killings of off-duty members of the public security forces and local officials; kidnappings and forced disappearances; massive forced displacements; suborning and intimidation of judges, prosecutors, and witnesses; infringement on citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on freedom of movement; widespread recruitment of child soldiers; attacks against human rights activists; harassment, intimidation, and killings of teachers and trade unionists.

Representatives of the government, the ELN, civil society, and international observers continued meeting to explore a possible peace process and demobilization of the ELN. Government steps to improve the human rights and security situation showed demonstrable results.

Culture

Arts and crafts in the town of Ráquira, Boyacá Department.

Due in part to geography, Colombian culture has been heavily fragmented into five major cultural regions. Rural to urban migration and globalization have changed how many Colombians live and express themselves as large cities become melting pots of people (many of whom are refugees from various provinces fleeing fighting that has hit Colombia throughout its violent history). Most recent is the displacement to cities and other countries caused by the Colombian armed conflict.

Education

Over 93 percent of the entire population over 15 years of age can read and write, and this number continues to increase. But while literacy is at 93 percent in urban areas, only 67 percent in rural areas are literate. The language of instruction is Spanish.

Sixty percent of students complete primary schooling (five years) and move on to secondary schooling (six years). Primary education is free and compulsory for nine years for children between 6 and 12 years of age. In many rural areas, teachers are poorly qualified and only five years of primary school are offered.

Colombia has 24 public universities.

Transportation

Occidente tunnel, Antioquia.

Colombia has a network of national highways. The Pan-American Highway travels through Colombia, connecting the country with Venezuela to the east and Ecuador to the south. Colombia's principal airport is El Dorado International Airport in Bogotá. Several national and international airlines operate from El Dorado. Bogotá's airport is one of the largest and most expensive in Latin America. Because of its central location in Colombia and the Americas, it is preferred by national land transportation providers, as well as national and international air transportation providers.

Notes

  1. Constitution of Colombia, 1991 (Article 10) Retrieved August 10,2022. (Spanish)
  2. 2.0 2.1 Central Intelligence Agency, Colombia The World Factbook. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 World Economic Outlook Database: Colombia International Monetary Fund, April 2022. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  4. GINI index – Colombia World Bank. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  5. La Hora Legal Para Colombia Instituto Nacional de Metrología. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  6. T. Van der Hammen, and G. Correal, Prehistoric Man on the Sabana de Bogota: Data for an Ecological Prehistory, Paleography, Paleoclimatology, Paleoecology 25 (1978): 179-190.
  7. Sylvia Broadbent, Los Chibchas: organización socio-política Série Latinoamericana 5 (Bogotá: Facultad de Sociología, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, 1964).
  8. Luis Gilberto Murillo Urrutia, El Choco: The African Heart of Colombia, The Journal of Pan African Studies 8(2) (July 2015):256-260. Retrieved August 10, 2022.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Academia Colombiana de Historia. Historia extensa de Colombia (41 volúmenes). Bogotá: Ediciones Lerner, 1965-1986. ISBN 9589501338 (Obra completa)
  • Buckman, Robert T. Latin America. World Today Series. Harpers Ferry, WV: Stryker-Post Publications, 2006. ISBN 1887985751
  • Bushnell, David. The Making of Modern Colombia: A Nation in Spite of Itself. University of California Press, 1993. ISBN 978-0520082892
  • Cadavid Misas, Roberto. Cursillo de historia de Colombia: de la conquista a la independencia. Bogotá: Intermedio Editores, 2004. ISBN 9587091345
  • Calderón Schrader, Camilo; Gil, Antonio; Torras, Daniel. Enciclopedia de Colombia (4 volúmenes). Barcelona: céano Grupo Editorial, 2001. ISBN 8449419476 (Obra completa)
  • Calderón Schrader, Camilo. Gran enciclopedia de Colombia (11 volúmenes). Bogotá: Círculo de Lectores, 1993. ISBN 9582802944 (obra completa)
  • Cavelier Gaviria, Germán. Centenario de Panamá: una historia de la separación de Colombia en 1903. Bogotá: Universidad Externado de Colombia, 2003. ISBN 9586167186
  • Chasteen, John Charles. Born in Blood and Fire: A Concise History of Latin America. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2001. ISBN 0393050483
  • Gómez Hoyos, Rafael. La independencia de Colombia. Madrid: Editorial Mapfre, Colecciones Mapfre, 1992. ISBN 8471005964
  • Hernández de Alba, Guillermo. Como nació la República de Colombia. Colección Bolsilibros. Bogotá: Academia Colombiana de Historia, 2004. ISBN 9588040353
  • Jaramillo Uribe, Jaime; Tirado Mejía, Álvaro; Calderón Schrader, Camilo. Nueva historia de Colombia (12 volúmenes). Bogotá: Planeta Colombiana Editorial, 2000. ISBN 9586142515 (Obra completa)
  • Markham, Lois. Colombia: The Gateway to South America. New York: Marshall Cavendish, 1997. ISBN 0761401407
  • Morrison, Marion. Colombia. New York: Grolier Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0516211064
  • Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo. Colombia indígena. Medellín: Hola Colina, 1998. ISBN 9586382761
  • Streissguth, Tom. Colombia in Pictures. Minneapolis, MN: Lerner Publications, 2004. ISBN 0822509334

External links

All links retrieved January 7, 2024.

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