Buenaventura, Colombia – Day after day, month after month, Consuelo Manyoma waits for information that it’s secure for her household of seven to return dwelling.
Manyoma is from San Isidro, an Afro-Colombian village nestled between tropical forests and the Calima River within the nation’s southwest.
There, 9 Black communities collectively personal 67,000 hectares (165,600 acres), the place households make a dwelling by farming, fishing, and logging. However the city can also be a strategic cease within the worldwide cocaine commerce, situated alongside a hall that drug traffickers use to succeed in Buenaventura, the nation’s largest port.
Consequently, gunfire usually echoes by San Isidro, leaving villagers in concern of stray bullets and different threats. However two years in the past, on April 10, 2022, Manyoma and different residents reached a breaking level.
After a number of gunfights, an imposed curfew and the disappearance of a villager, households fled the village in droves, climbing onto two buses they’d chartered with what few possessions they may carry.
However their escape thrust them into the midst of one more disaster: considered one of mass inner displacement.
Thousands and thousands of Colombians have been pressured from their houses, because the nation contends with a decades-long battle that pits authorities forces towards drug cartels, armed teams and right-wing paramilitaries, all jockeying for energy and territory.
Since leaving San Isidro, Manyoma’s household and dozens of others have lived crammed within the Crystal Coliseum, a sports activities enviornment turned emergency shelter in Buenaventura.
They thought their keep would final a matter of weeks, possibly months. However now, two years on, Manyoma and others say they really feel stranded in a state of limbo, ready for a peace that by no means appears to return and struggling to scrape a dwelling within the meantime.
“It feels like living in a crystal ball with no way out,” Manyoma informed Al Jazeera.