Under normal circumstances, getting about 13,000 heavily armed, violent people off the streets would cheer up even the most skeptical. That wasn't the case in Colombia eight months ago when President Alvaro Uribe announced his plan to disarm, demobilize and reincorporate into society the largest paramilitary group, the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia.
Many of Uribe's critics, though, had a point. Colombia needs justice as much as it needs peace. Under Uribe's initial plan, the paramilitary armies would have ended up, literally, getting away with murder. Many Colombians objected to pardoning those responsible for massacres. Human Rights Watch has insisted that members of the paramilitary who committed murders or issued threats be punished for their crimes. Last week, the situation improved for Uribe and for Colombia. The Organization of American States, with substantial feedback from Human Rights Watch, agreed to support Colombia's peace process by sending a mission headed by an experienced peace negotiator, Sergio Caramagna, to monitor a cease-fire and oversee the disarmament of the private armies. The OAS presence there should help Colombia reduce the level of violence in the country while ensuring that those responsible for serious human rights violations will be prosecuted and punished.
