How have Colombia-FARC peace talks affected scale of conflict?
The FARC displaced roughly 50,000 people since peace talks began in 2012, according to a UN report. But the rebel group's role in driving overall violence in Colombia since 2012 isn't clear cut.
Members of Colombia's government and Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) give a joint statement in Havana, Cuba, Dec. 3, 2014.
Ramon Espinosa/AP
A new United Nations report provides some sense of the scale of 's conflict since rebel group the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia () began peace talks with the government in 2012, even as negotiations remain in limbo following the capture of a military general in November.
Approximately 50,000 victims were displaced due to actions by the FARC rebel group from November 2012 to June 2014,  by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA).
This figure represents roughly 17 percent of over 300,000 victims of displacement in  during that period. Confrontations between the  and Colombian military accounted for an additional 27 percent of displacements.
Meanwhile, groups known as "BACRIM," from the Spanish acronym for "criminal bands," were responsible for 23 percent of displacements, and "other" groups were behind 30 percent, according to the UNOCHA report.Â
The UNOCHA report also included slightly different figures from 's victims unit, known as the UARIV, which say that guerrilla groups – including both the  and the National Liberation Army () – were responsible for 48 percent of displacements; the BACRIM for 19 percent, and "unknown" actors for 31 percent.Â
The displacements were concentrated in the country's Pacific region, as well as the department of Antioquia.
Additionally, the UNOCHA report stated that since the peace talks began, 10.5 percent of 's reported  cases were attributed to either the  or the , without clarifying where this number is sourced from.
The report also stated that "one out of five" kidnappings in  involve either theÌý´Ç°ùÌý, although common crime is responsible for the majority of cases – 76 percent.Â
InSight Crime Analysis
When it comes to the question of whether the  have been the primary drivers of 's conflict since the peace talks began, the figures from the UNOCHA report don't present a very clearcut answer. This isn't helped by the report's occasionally unclear explanations of where it sourced its statistics from.
Some of the figures sourced from the UNOCHA report could certainly be used to make the case that other actors besides the  remain major contributors to the conflict. Even if the  and the  are responsible for 48 percent of 's displacements, put together, the BACRIM and "unknown" actors" are responsible for 50 percent, according to the UARIV figures quoted in the report.