Although the soil and climate are adverse for agriculture and other economic activities, human settlements do exist in the Sumapaz Páramo, including the villages of San Juan de Sumapaz, Nazareth, Santa Rosa and El Hato (only the first two have road access) with an estimated 1200 families, most of them under the
poverty threshold, living on less than $1.25 per day, without schools or
sanitation. In consequence, the peasants often invade the protected area to grow
potato crops. The natural forest line is severely altered by human activity (logging, intensive grazing), which makes the difference between natural and artificial grasslands difficult to distinguish. An estimated 10,000 heads of cattle live or feed within the protected area. In 1950, president
Mariano Ospina Pérez ordered the Colombian banks not to approve loans destined to establishment of crops or cattle at altitudes higher than as an attempt to discourage such activities. Illegal armed groups such as
FARC and
ELN guerrillas used the area in recent years as a corridor for the transportation of
kidnapping victims,
weapon trafficking and
drug trafficking. The Colombian government, in accordance with
democratic security policies, established a center of military operations in 2002: the General Antonio Arredondo Military base, achieving the
withdrawal of the illegal forces. However, the presence of the
Colombian army has generated controversy over the environmental impact, with alleged destruction of the
frailejones, whose leaves are supposedly collected by the soldiers for making rudimentary
mattresses to sleep on. == See also ==