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Zorro Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-24-08 09:27 AM
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Colombia kills 20 FARC rebels in air raid
<snip>

The Colombian air force has bombed a rebel camp, killing at least 20 left-wing guerrillas in the latest blow to the insurgency this year, the government has said.

It was the deadliest military strike against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, since the March bombing of a jungle base on Ecuador's side of the border in which key rebel commander Raul Reyes was killed.

The latest raid, on Sunday, allowed the police to collect a large cache of guerrilla arms and explosives in the mountainous southwest province of Cauca, the government said in a statement.

"This was an extremely active guerrilla front involved in blowing up electrical towers and threatening civilian populations in Cauca. The destruction of this camp will hurt them," said Cesar Restrepo, an analyst at Security and Democracy, a Bogota think tank...

<snip>

More at: http://www.stuff.co.nz/4629378a12.html

DU's FARCies will no doubt be in quite a dither over this latest setback...
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Bacchus39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-24-08 09:37 AM
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1. undoubtedly this FARC front was just about to release the 700
remaining hostages and then Uribe comes along and screws everything up.
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AlphaCentauri Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-24-08 10:21 AM
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2. Thank you for the press release although nobody cares how civilians are killed
Colombia’s army is passing off murdered civilians as guerrillas in its war on FARC.


Mariel Munoz was out selling food near her home in Vista Hermosa, Colombia, when a local boy ran up to her and said: "The army took Jailler and I think they killed him."

By the time Munoz found her son, the soldiers had dressed his corpse in guerrilla army fatigues and planted a radio, a gun and grenade on him. Under pressure from President Alvaro Uribe to show gains in the endless fight to destroy FARC - the leftist rebel army which has been at war with the Colombian state since the 1960s - the soldiers were trying to pass off 15-year-old Jailler as a guerrilla.

There is no evidence that the boy was ever a member of FARC. "He worked by his father's side," his mother told me. "When he wasn't here, he'd tell me where he was. He was a decent boy, he didn't like drinking, he liked
watching TV and playing football."

Jailler worked stripping the leaves from coca plants - an illegal but common enough job in Colombia, the world's biggest cocaine producer - or as a wood carrier. "Everyone loved Jailler," his mother said. "They killed him for supposedly being a guerrilla, but he never liked the guerrillas, or the army. They killed him because they felt like it."

Mariel Munoz's story might be treated as the outpourings of a grieving mother unable to bear the truth - if her story wasn't a common one. Last month, Amnesty International USA published a report on extra-judicial killings in Colombia, and detailed cases where peasants have been seized by the army in civilian clothes, killed and later dressed in guerrilla fatigues in a phenomenon known as 'false positives'.

Jailler died in 2006. Last year, Munoz decided to launch a legal case to question the killing. In February she had to leave her home when army officers threatened her after learning about the lawsuit.

"The army came to my home. One of them
said, 'What a shame that I let you escape,' And then he made a gesture like he was slitting someone's throat. I left everything dumped there, and fled with the clothes I was wearing. They didn't give me time to get anything else."

She now lives in Bogota, supported by friends. "What else am I going to do? I'll keep on fighting," she says.

Jailler's death came in a wave of executions carried out with almost complete impunity by the Colombian army, according to Ramiro Orjuela, a Bogota-based lawyer working for victims of state violence. In the Meta province alone - a cattle-ranching region south-east of the capital - 300 people have been killed since 2006. The army's 12th Mobile Brigade operates there, and is believed to be responsible for most of the killings.

I met Mariel Munoz just as the news was emerging of the capture of FARC leader Nelly Avila Moreno (right), known as Karina, wanted for a string of murders, abductions and extortion. Karina - women make up more than a third of the ranks of FARC - was reported
to be "nearly dying of hunger" when she handed herself in after President Uribe guaranteed her safety if she surrendered.

However, behind the government celebrations of Karina's capture, and of the recent high-profile raid into neighbouring Ecuador to execute FARC's number two, Raul Reyes, the army's casual slaughter of innocent people continues.

As John Lindsay-Poland, of New York's Fellowship for Reconciliation, puts it, the killings are easy: the army are rarely if ever prosecuted for killing civilians, and they measure success by body count. "The predominant proclamation of success is how many guerrillas were killed in combat. There is seldom any punishment for killing a civilian." Out of 955 reported cases of military killings of civilians over five years - including 'false positives' - only two have resulted in convictions.

Mariel Munoz recalls the moment she confronted the officers who confirmed they had killed her son. "They laughed, right there and then."
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