I don't have the comprehensive data, but I do have UNHCR data from the UN. This data says that indigenous peoples represent 2% of the population, but represent 12% of all displaced people inside Colombia. African Colombians represent 8% of the population, but represent 20% of the people displaced internally in Colombia, which shows that there is quite a disproportionate situation. It's a small population, but many people have been displaced.
Secondly, it is possible, and the government has insisted on this repeatedly, that the total number of people displaced within Colombia has been decreasing. However, they haven't progressed, and the resistance strategies posed by the communities in different parts of the country have changed. If you look at the number of people displaced today, the numbers are lower, but there are a growing number of communities throughout the country that are subjected to the same risk factors, and the fact is they cannot move, they cannot be displaced, or they have chosen not to leave their lands. So if you take this into consideration, of course, yes, the rate of people displaced has diminished; however, the risk factors, in other words the risks themselves, have not disappeared.
We know of cases, not cases of torture by the public security forces, but we do know of other situations in Río Micay, in the area of Buenaventura. There, for example, the armed forces have subjected agricultural workers in Colombia to forced labour. For example, a helicopter will land and they take the young and they force them to clear the entire territory so that other helicopters will be able to land. In other words, the young will not be allowed to say, “I'm not doing that job; it's not my job to do it.” They can't do that. And this, of course, translates into a context in which there are territorial issues and risks for all those young people. There's a danger of being attacked by armed forces.