In recent years, violence in the territories has been increasing significantly due to the growth and emergence of new armed structures that dispute the control of drug trafficking routes and illegal income in areas historically abandoned by the State.One of the most common forms of violence that has left thousands of victims in Colombia is forced displacement, which is caused by different factors such as: intimidation, land theft, not accepting deals with agents of the conflict, and others.Alluding to this issue, the High Council for Peace, Victims and Reconciliation of Bogotá, presented a report on the situation of victims in the capital, as well as the care routes.The document made it clear that, between January and February 2022, 9,244 victims of the armed conflict arrived in the city.In a disaggregated manner, the District showed that 50.3% of the total victims residing in Bogotá are located in six localities of the city: Kennedy (11%), Ciudad Bolívar (10.2%), Bosa (0.2%), Suba ( 8.2%), Usme (5.3%) and Engativá (5.1%).One of the concerns that is becoming a red alert for the authorities is that in the last two years displacement to Bogotá grew by 11% and that more than 80% of the victims are from ethnic and minority groups such as black or Afro-Colombian communities. , gypsies or ROM, palenqueras among others, according to the District Administration.According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), in 2021, 73,900 displaced people were registered in the country.“Between January and December 2021, a protection crisis occurred in the Colombian Pacific associated with the presence of more than five non-state armed actors who dispute territorial and social control in many of the municipalities that reported the greatest number of people affected by actions. of armed violence”.The report detailed that the most affected areas in the country were Chocó, Cauca and Nariño.These departments concentrated more than 75% of the emergencies due to massive displacement and confinement.The OCHA investigation also showed that the main causes of forced displacement in Colombia are the actions of illegal armed groups against the civilian population.Among the crimes that trigger this crisis, 32% are direct threats through phone calls, pamphlets, messages, among others, while the other 32% are due to confrontations and harassment.Another point that creates alert is the revictimization to which civilians are exposed.OCHA reports that several families displaced in 2021 had already been in this situation in previous years.“In several of the displacements reported in 2021, people were identified who had previously been forcibly displaced for the same reasons (presence and direct actions of non-state armed groups in the territories of the communities, especially within Indigenous Reservations and Community Councils). ”.The OCHA report also indicates that of those displaced last year, only 11,700 have been able to return to their territories.This means that more than 61,600 people remain displaced in host communities, where they generally do not have the resources to meet the intersectoral needs of the displaced.The main needs of the displaced population are based on lack of protection and access to temporary shelter, food, health services, education and access to safe water.