David L. Wilson on Sat, 4 Sep 1999 04:27:17 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> The Colombia Challenge (fwd) |
forwarded forwarded forwarded forwarded forwarded forwarded to stop forwards, mailto:redscares@yahoo.com to stop forwards, mailto:redscares@yahoo.com from: Weekly News Update nicadlw@earthlink.net [I'm sending a rather lengthy excerpt from our publication, the Weekly News Update on the Americas. I apologize for the length, but I think it's important to get these facts out. I'm offering this as a sort of challenge to the US media that gave such extensive coverage just a few months ago to atrocities by Serbian paramilitaries, and to the left-liberal types who insisted that we had to "do something" to stop the atrocities. The problem then, for many of us, was that we couldn't see how bombing Yugoslavia was "doing something" to help the ethnic Albanians of Kosovo. In the case of Colombia, on the other hand, there is no problem seeing how the US could "do something." For starters, the US could stop funding, training and equipping the Colombian police and military, which aid and protect the paramilitaries. But if past history is any evidence, the US undoubtedly has much more to answer for than that; it is hard to believe that US agencies have not been directly involved in these death squads, as they were in Central America and Haiti. So the US could also "do something" by helping bring the paramilitaries to justice, along with their controllers, both in Colombia and the US. My challenge for the media and the left-liberals is this: Will you cover Colombian paramilitary atrocities at the same level as you covered atrocities by the Serbian paramilitaries? Will you be just as vocal in denouncing them? Will you work to educate people here on the situation, will you lobby and demonstrate for the US to end its disastrous Colombia policy? Will you call for "doing something"? And if you won't, how can you avoid the suspicion that your concern for human rights last spring was only an effort to support the war propaganda drive of the Clinton administration?] WEEKLY NEWS UPDATE ON THE AMERICAS ISSUE #500, AUGUST 29, 1999 NICARAGUA SOLIDARITY NETWORK OF GREATER NEW YORK 339 LAFAYETTE ST., NEW YORK, NY 10012 (212) 674-9499 ... *3. UN OFFICE BLAMES COLOMBIAN GOVERNMENT IN LATEST MASSACRE Several hundred rightwing paramilitaries affiliated with the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) killed at least 35 civilians and wounded eight on Aug. 20 and 21 in three villages in Tibu municipality near the Venezuelan border in the oil-rich northeastern department of Norte de Santander. In one of the AUC's worst massacres so far this year, 21 civilians, most of them campesinos, were killed in the community of La Gabarra, eight in Cano Lupa, four in Petrolea and three in Campo Dos, the office of the Defender of the People, the government human rights office, reported on Aug. 25. Four of the victims were minors, according to Norte de Santander Defender of the People Ivan Villamizar. Vanguardia Liberal, a daily published in Bucaramanga in neighboring Santander department, gave the death toll as 35. [Reuters 8/23/99, 8/25/99; El Diario-La Prensa (NY) 8/24/99 from AP; VL 8/27/99 The Tibu massacre was just one part of an AUC offensive in the region that left a total of about 56 civilians dead in less than a week and drove more than 4,000 across the border into Venezuela. [New York Times 8/26/99] The offensive has apparently not ended. Public Defender Villamizar told reporters on Aug. 26 that the AUC told dozens of campesinos the day before that they had 72 hours to leave the area. According to Villamizar, the paramilitary group is trying to dominate the region, a traditional stronghold of leftist guerrilla organizations and an area of coca cultivation; both guerrillas and paramilitary groups are known to raise money from coca cultivators. More than 142 people were murdered in a similar AUC offensive in the region in May, and some 2,500 people fled to Venezuela [see Updates #488, 489]. [Reuters 8/25/99; ED-LP 8/24/99 from AP; La Republica (Lima) 8/27/99 from EFE] The paramilitaries typically "arrive in a town or village, seal it off, then with a list in hand drag suspected guerrilla sympathizers into the street, where they are executed," according to Reuters. [Reuters 8/23/99] +++++++++++++ forwarded forwarded forwarded to stop forwards, mailto:redscares@yahoo.com +++++++++++++ In a report issued on Aug. 25, the Colombia office of the United Nations (UN) High Commissioner for Human Rights condemned the Colombian government for the Aug. 20-21 massacre: "Despite the commitments taken on by the government, it has not carried out the necessary measures and actions for guaranteeing and protecting the lives and security of the inhabitants of this region," the office reported. On Aug. 25 the London-based human rights group Amnesty International issued a communique charging that "the security forces and their paramilitary allies go on committing serious human rights violations with almost total impunity." Human rights groups say the security forces are closely linked to the paramilitaries. [Reuters 8/25/99] On Aug. 26, two days after the UN report appeared, the Colombian Military Forces Second Division reported that two AUC members had been killed in confrontations with the army in the Catatumba river area in Norte de Santander earlier that day. The military also reported that eight members of the leftist National Liberation Army (ELN) were killed fighting with the army, in Santa Rosa, in the northern department of Bolivar on Aug. 25. [LR 8/27/99 from EFE; VL 8/27/99] *4. COLOMBIA: PARAMILITARY VIOLENCE RISES Colombia's office of the Defender of the People reports that 847 civilians were massacred in the first six months of 1999, a 44% increase over the 588 massacre victims reported for the same period in 1998; the office defines a massacre as "an action in which four or more defenseless persons are intentionally murdered, in the same place and at the same time, through armed or other violent means." The main perpetrators of massacres are the paramilitaries and armed groups financed by drug traffickers and large landowners. Antioquia continues to be the department with the highest number of cases and victims, followed by Valle del Cauca, Putumayo and Caqueta. [Translation of Office of the Defender of the People report, undated, posted on Colombia Support Network website <http://www.igc.org/csn>; ED-LP 8/24/99 from AP] Paramilitary violence is continuing unchecked in the Colombian countryside. At least 24 people were killed by AUC-affiliated paramilitaries between Aug. 15 and 17 in rural areas of Zambrano and El Carmen municipalities, in Bolivar department. The attacks forced some 500 people to leave their homes and take refuge in the center of Zambrano. [El Colombiano (Medellin) 8/18/99, some from EFE; AFP 8/17/99] Speaking to several radio stations on the condition of anonymity, a campesino who escaped with his wife and three children said paramilitaries killed seven of his relatives in the village of Capaca, in Zambrano municipality. He said the paramilitaries gave residents of the village two days to abandon their land. A communique released on Aug. 18 by the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) said the massacres around Zambrano were committed by paramilitary units "with the support of Marine Battalion number three and troops of the First Army Brigade." [Inter Press Service 8/19/99] In Curumani, in the northeastern department of Cesar, eight people were killed on Aug. 18 by an AUC commando. Seven bodies, belonging to members of one family, were pulled out of a river on Aug. 18 in the town of Morelia, in the southern department of Caqueta. [IPS 8/19/99] At least eight campesinos were killed on Aug. 18 in the village of San Roque, Antioquia department, in what police said was a suspected rightwing paramilitary attack. [AFP 8/18/99] Early on Aug. 8, 11 people were murdered by presumed rightwing paramilitaries in three attacks in Colombia's coffee-growing region: five people were killed in Genova, Quindio department; and six people were killed in two attacks in La Dorada, Caldas department. [LR 8/9/99 from EFE] *5. COLOMBIA: OFFICERS CHARGED IN PARAMILITARY MASSACRE The General Prosecutor's Office has charged three officers and two junior officers of the Colombian Army with facilitating the murder and disappearance of dozens of people in a July 1997 paramilitary massacre in three villages in Mapiripan municipality, Meta department [see Updates #391, 442; and Update supplement "US-Funded Troops Back Paramilitary Massacres, 3/22/98]. The officers were identified as Lt. Col. Lino Hernandez Sanchez Prado; Lt. Col. Carlos Eduardo Avila Beltran; Maj. Arbey Garcia Narvaez; 2nd Sgt. Juan Carlos Gamarra Polo; and 1st Cpl. Leonardo Montoya Rubiano. In the massacre, paramilitaries from the United Self-Defense Forces of Cordoba and Uraba (ACCU) flew fully armed in two planes from Necocli (in Uraba, in northern Antioquia department), to the airport in San Jose de Guaviare, in the southern department of Guaviare. Lt. Col. Hernandez, who was then interim commander of an army mobile brigade, facilitated the paramilitaries' arrival in Guaviare and provided them with vehicles, weapons and someone to act as a guide. Gamarra reportedly helped with information, uniforms, and weapons transport. The massacre is also being investigated by the National Human Rights Unit of the Attorney General's office. Others arrested in connection with the case include several crew members of the aircraft that transported the paramilitaries to Guaviare. [Hoy (NY) 8/13/99 from EFE] The Washington Post reports, without giving a date, that the Attorney General's office has ordered dishonorable discharges for three military officers and suspensions for five police agents for failing to halt the massacres of 36 civilians from the city of Barrancabermeja in Santander department in May 1998. [WP 8/29/99] [Troops and police reportedly set up checkpoints and carried out sweeps before and during the massacres, which they made no effort to stop; see Updates #434, 436.] .... ======================================================================= Weekly News Update on the Americas * Nicaragua Solidarity Network of NY 339 Lafayette St, New York, NY 10012 * 212-674-9499 fax: 212-674-9139 http://home.earthlink.net/~dbwilson/wnuhome.html * wnu@igc.apc.org ======================================================================= ============================================================= David L. Wilson * 212-674-9499 * <nicadlw@earthlink.net> If you can't spell it, don't bomb it! -- Anonymous ============================================================= forwarded forwarded forwarded forwarded forwarded forwarded to stop forwards, mailto:redscares@yahoo.com to stop forwards, mailto:redscares@yahoo.com # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net