In 1974 in the south of Colombia, an indigenous peasant group known as
Quintín Lame (CQL) emerged. This group, which received military training from the Marxist–Leninist Communist Party (PC-ML), was formed after the killing of regional indigenous leaders in Cauca by repressive forces of the state and large landowners. The CQL was thus constituted as a military self defense group. Thanks to an organization created years earlier by the indigenous leader Manuel Quintín Lame (1880–1967), the group had the support of many indigenous communities in the region of the
Valle del Cauca,
Huila,
Tolima, and parts of the departments of
Meta and
Caquetá Department. The founders of the Quintín Lame armed group distinguished themselves from other armed groups of the time by their multicultural approach. The group included
mestizos such as Gustavo Mejía, Pedro León Rodríguez, and Edgar Londoño; foreigners such as the Hungarian Pablo Tattay, Gabriel Soler from
Argentina, and Teresa Tomish from
Chile; and
indigenous people from different ethnic communities in the south of the country. Until the early 1980s the CQL acted in self-defense of traditional territories and only used arms when territorial and political autonomy was threatened. The group's first military offensive took place in 1984 with an assault on
Castilla, a small town in the Cauca department, and the takeover of the village of
Santander de Quilichao. The Quintin Lame were involved in the
Simón Bolívar Guerrilla Coordinating Board == Demobilisation ==