HISTORY
During
the pre-Colombian period, the area now known as Colombia was inhabited
by indigenous peoples who were primitive hunters or nomadic farmers.
The Chibchas, who lived in the Bogotá region, were the
largest indigenous group.
The
Spanish sailed along the north coast of Colombia as early as 1500;
however, their first permanent settlement, at Santa Marta, was
not established until 1525. In 1549, the area was a Spanish colony
with the capital at Santa Fe de Bogotá. In 1717, Bogotá
became the capital of the Viceroyalty of New Granada, which included
what are now Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama. The city became one
of the principal administrative centers of the Spanish possessions
in the New World, along with Lima and Mexico City.
In
August 2000 the capital's name was officially changed from "Santa
Fe de Bogotá" to the more commonly used "Bogotá."
On July 20, 1810, the citizens of Bogotá created the first
representative council to defy Spanish authority. Full independence
was proclaimed in 1813, and in 1819 the Republic of Greater Colombia
was formed.
The
Republic and La Violencia (The Violence)
The new Republic of Greater Colombia included all the territory
of the former Viceroyalty. Simon Bolivar was elected its first
president and Francisco de Paula Santander, vice president. Two
political parties grew out of conflicts between the followers
of Bolivar and Santander and their political visions--the Conservatives
and the Liberals--and have since dominated Colombian politics.
Bolivar's supporters, who later formed the nucleus of the Conservative
Party, sought strong centralized government, alliance with the
Roman Catholic Church, and a limited franchise. Santander's followers,
forerunners of the Liberals, wanted a decentralized government,
state rather than church control over education and other civil
matters, and a broadened suffrage.
Throughout
the 19th and early 20th centuries, each party held the presidency
for roughly equal periods of time. Colombia maintained a tradition
of civilian government and regular, free elections. Notwithstanding
the country's commitment to democratic institutions, Colombia's
history also has been characterized by widespread, violent conflict.
Two civil wars resulted from bitter rivalry between the Conservative
and Liberal parties: The War of a Thousand Days (1899-1902) claimed
an estimated 100,000 lives, and La Violencia (1946-1957) cost
another 300,000 Colombians.
The
National Front
In July 1957, former Conservative President Laureano Gomez (1950-53)
and former Liberal President Alberto Lleras Camargo (1945-46)
proclaimed the "Declaration of Sitges," in which they
proposed a "National Front" whereby the Liberal and
Conservative parties would govern jointly. The presidency would
be determined by regular elections every 4 years; the two parties
would have parity in all other elective and appointive offices.
The
National Front ended La Violencia, and National Front administrations
instituted social and economic reforms in cooperation with the
Alliance for Progress. Although the system established by the
Sitges agreement was phased out by 1978, the 1886 Colombian Constitution--in
effect until 1991--required that the losing political party be
given adequate and equitable participation in the government.
The 1991 Constitution does not have that requirement, but subsequent
administrations have included members of opposition parties.
Post-National
Front Years
Between 1978 and 1982, the government focused on ending the limited,
but persistent, Cuban-backed insurgencies that sought to undermine
Colombia's traditional democratic system. In 1984, President Belisario
Betancur, a Conservative who won 47% of the popular vote, negotiated
a cease-fire that included the release of many guerrillas imprisoned
during the effort to overpower the insurgents. The cease-fire
ended when Democratic Alliance/M-19 (AD/M-19) guerrillas resumed
fighting in 1985.
An
attack on the Palace of Justice in Bogotá by the AD/M-19
on November 6-7, 1985, and its violent suppression by the army,
shocked Colombians. Of the 115 people killed, 11 were Supreme
Court justices. Although the government and the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) renewed their truce in March 1986,
peace with other revolutionary movements, in particular the AD/M-19--then
the largest insurgent group--and the National Liberation Army
(ELN) was remote as Betancur left office.
The
AD/M-19 and several smaller guerilla groups were successfully
incorporated into a peace process during the late 1980s, which
culminated in a national assembly to write a new constitution,
which took effect in 1991. The FARC had declared a unilateral
cease-fire under Betancur, which led to the establishment of the
Union Patriotica (UP), a legal and non-clandestine political organization.
After growing violence against its UP members, when an estimated
1,000-3,000 were killed, the truce with the FARC again ended in
1990.
Following
administrations had to contend with the guerrillas, paramilitaries,
and narcotics traffickers. Narco-terrorists assassinated three
presidential candidates before Cesar Gaviria Trujillo was elected
in 1990. Since the death of Medellín cartel leader Pablo
Escobar in a police shootout in December 1993, indiscriminate
acts of violence associated with that organization have abated
as the "cartels" now are broken up into multiple, smaller
and often-competing trafficking organizations. Nevertheless, violence
continues as these drug organizations resort to violence as part
of their operations as well as to protest against government policies,
especially extradition.
President
Ernesto Samper assumed office in August 1994. However, a political
crisis relating to largescale contributions from drug traffickers
to Samper's presidential campaign diverted attentio