Isabel Cristina Zuleta López (born 12 April 1982) is a Colombian activist and politician. An outspoken advocate for environmental causes, women's rights, and human rights, she was director of the Living Rivers movement in Antioquia, and belongs to the Movement for Water and Life. She is best known for her work as a social leader [es] in communities opposed to the Ituango Dam project.
Zuleta was born on 12 April 1982, in Ituango, Antioquia, where she lived until she was 14. She had to leave the municipality after receiving threats from paramilitary groups.[1] She studied sociology and history at the University of Antioquia, and it was there that she began to take part in community groups of women victims of the armed conflict.[2]
Zuleta was director of the Living Rivers (Spanish: Ríos Vivos) movement in Antioquia. In 2008, various people and organizations learned of the intention of Empresas Públicas de Medellín (EPM) to build the country's largest hydroelectric plant in their municipality. These people opposed the Ituango Dam megaproject since they perceived that it would have negative environmental and social consequences, and they organized to prevent its construction. Zuleta was linked to this process when she was studying at the University of Antioquia. Since then she has worked with communities of the Mojana region [es], Cauca, and the Bajo Cauca Canyon.[3]
Death threats
Zuleta's opposition to the Ituango Dam has led to her being the subject of surveillance, eavesdropping on her communications, and threats against her life. Some of the latter came directly from paramilitary groups.[4]
Several members and leaders of the Living Rivers movement have been assassinated since the initiation of the Ituango Dam project.[5]
Zuleta is well-known for being one of the biggest opponents of the Ituango Dam. She has appeared in various media, arguing against what for her is a project that violates the rights of communities and victims of enforced disappearances buried in the canyon.[8][9][10]
In 2018, Zuleta, on behalf of the Living Rivers Movement, received the National Award for the Defense of Human Rights in Colombia [es], in the category "Collective Experience or Process of the Year", for organizations dedicated to the defense of indigenous communities' rights.[4][11]
In 2021, the social psychologist Florence Thomas named Zuleta one of the country's 10 women of the year for her contribution to the lives of Colombian women.[13]
^"Ganadores séptima edición" [Seventh Edition Winners] (in Spanish). National Award for the Defense of Human Rights in Colombia. 5 September 2018. Retrieved 8 October 2022.