Colombia has a murder rate ten times higher than the US. The country has
endured one rebellion and revolution after another for over a hundred years. A
culture of guns and violence has developed and thrived. The reasons have to do with
Colombia's history. When Colombia threw off Spanish colonial rule, the nation
was largely agricultural, with a few families owning most of the land and the
majority of the population working as tenant farmers. When the industrial
revolution arrived in the late 19th century, much of the farming population left
the land for wage work. This created a shift in political power. The great
landowners now controlled less of the voting population and had a labor
shortage. The liberal political parties were now able to gain power. But the
landowning families not only had enormous prestige and money, but also
maintained their own private armies. With these pistoleros, they bloodily put
down strikes by urban and rural workers and generally terrorized much of the
population. But the population in general began to arm itself and when a dispute
could not be settled at the ballot box, it was decided by a lot of armed
violence. Political power shifted between the liberal (largely workers and
liberals of all classes) and conservatives (the wealthy, most of the clergy and
political conservatives of all classes.) And the fighting became more violent
when one part came into power and tried to undo all that the other party had
done before. Everyone got in the habit of keeping a gun handy. After World War
II, many political groups maintained armed units at all times and life out in
the countryside became very precarious. Large scale massacres were common and it
was often hard to tell a bandit from an armed political activist.
Then came the drug lords in the 1980s. The largely leftist rebel groups were now financed by drug trafficking (about half a
billion dollars a year) and banditry (about $400 million a year.). The armed
rebels kept the government troops out of the rural regions where the drug crops
were grown and processed for export to the United States (and elsewhere.) In the
1990s, the government recognized these rebel/drug lord combinations as
formidable enough to negotiate with. But government attempts to negotiate a settlements
have not been successful. Some 120,000 people have been killed
during the four decades of low level rebellion. Popular opinion is
increasingly moving against the rebels, but the FARC has so much money and so
many guns, that there is no easy resolution of the problem in sight.