PDA

View Full Version : Progress made in Colombia as rebel leader is killed...



NcDeuce
10-23-2003, 01:24 PM
Colombian forces kill rebel leader

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- Colombian military officials said they had dealt a major blow to the nation's rebels by killing a guerrilla commander accused of kidnapping three U.S. military contractors and carrying out a string of assassinations and bombings.

Edgar Gustavo Navarro, the No. 2 leader of an elite unit of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, was killed during a gunfight Sunday along with 10 other rebels, Army Gen. Hector Martinez said.

"It is a major blow for this terrorist group," Martinez said Monday on local radio. He said Navarro died during clashes near San Vicente del Caguan, 175 miles southwest of the capital, Bogota.

Martinez said Navarro was behind the capture of three Americans _ Tom Howes, Marc Gonsalves and Keith Stansell -- after their single-engine plane crash-landed in FARC-controlled territory on February 13 while on a counternarcotics mission.

The rebels allegedly executed a fourth American, Tom Janis, and a Colombian soldier, Sgt. Luis Alcides Cruz, who also were on board.

The commander of Colombia's armed forces, Gen. Jorge Enrique Mora, said there was no indication the rebel leader was killed near where the hostages are being held, or that their lives had been endangered.

Mora, speaking to reporters while on a visit to Washington, also dismissed a recent taped interview in which the three captives said they didn't want the army to launch a rescue operation because they would likely die in the process.

"It must be kept in mind that the hostages were speaking under pressure," he said. "In Colombia, many, many hostages have been rescued" by security forces.

It was doubtful Navarro's death would affect the hostages, who are being guarded by hundreds of rebels under the authority of the FARC's high command.

But his death was seen as a victory for President Alvaro Uribe, who pledged an all-out war on rebels upon taking office little over a year ago.

The FARC considers the three Americans to be prisoners of war and wants to exchange them for imprisoned rebels. Washington is offering a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those involved in the murder of Janis and the kidnapping.

Gen. Martinez said Sunday's killing underscored the army's growing ability to hunt down guerrillas deep in their jungle strongholds.

Defense Minister Martha Lucia Ramirez told reporters that "Navarro participated in many major attacks that greatly affected our country."

Navarro is accused of being behind a car bombing that killed 12 people, the assassination of an army general and the kidnapping of at least half a dozen politicians, including that of former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt, who holds dual Colombian and French citizenship.

Navarro also planned the hijacking of a domestic airliner in February 2002 and the kidnapping a prominent senator who was on board -- an attack that led former President Andres Pastrana to cancel two years of fruitless peace talks with the FARC, authorities said.

The FARC and a smaller leftist rebel army have been waging war on the Colombian government for nearly 40 years. About 3,500 people, mainly civilians, die in the fighting each year.

Possibly assisted by SF or Delta?

usa320
10-23-2003, 03:13 PM
hopefully they will find our pilots soon.

Seoulstriker
10-23-2003, 03:27 PM
i haven't done any serious research into the whole Columbian deal, but I hear things over there are pretty f***ed up. :|

He219
10-23-2003, 03:33 PM
An image from Colombia posts in Today's Pic's. Oct 20 (http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=4603&start=0):


http://a1112.g.akamai.net/7/1112/492/03312000/news.lycos.com/news/ot_getImage.asp?op=thumb&id=447346
Larger View (http://a1112.g.akamai.net/7/1112/492/03312000/news.lycos.com/news/ot_getImage.asp?op=img&id=447346)

A Colombian army captain shows a photo of Edgar Gustavo Navarro, during a new conference in Bogota, Monday, Oct. 20, 2003. Colombian troops killed Navarro, the No. 2 leader of an elite unit of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, during a gunfight Sunday along with ten other rebels. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara)

NcDeuce
10-26-2003, 10:12 PM
Colombians reject anti-terrorism measures
Sunday, October 26, 2003 Posted: 1:26 PM EST (1826 GMT)

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- In a defeat for Colombia's popular, hardline president, voters appeared to have rejected measures to crack down on corruption and strengthen the fight against left-wing rebels and terrorism, preliminary referendum results showed Sunday.

With about 100,000 votes remaining to be counted, results showed the government failed to obtain enough votes to pass 11 of the 15 points on the referendum.

Among the measures Colombians defeated was one that would reduce the number of seats in Congress and another that would freeze state salaries and pensions.

The four referendum points that still stood a chance of being approved in the late vote-counting included a measure that would prevent convicted criminals from holding or running for public office.

Each point needed to be voted on by at least 25 percent of registered voters. Some voters appeared to have left some sections of the referendum ballot blank, thus annulling the result.

President Alvaro Uribe campaigned tirelessly for the referendum, saying it was vital to defeat terrorism and prevent an Argentina-style economic collapse.

Leftist rebels who opposed the referendum blocked a major highway Saturday, attacked an army base, ambushed police patrols and burned a half-dozen trucks. At least 13 people were killed, the Defense Ministry said. Rebels also destroyed four polling booths.

Nearly 250,000 troops protected polling stations and the nation's streets.

Defense Minister Martha Lucia Ramirez reported that fighters with the main rebel army, the Revolutionary Forces of Colombia, carried out total of 51 separate election-day attacks, but said they had been unable to undermine the electoral process.

Some Colombians complained that the 15 proposals on the referendum were complex and confusing.

Uribe called for freezing public-sector salaries for at least two years and capping state pensions in order to trim budget deficits that have spiraled as Uribe has increased defense spending. The government says the measures will save $7 billion over the next seven years.

Critics, who include members of his own party, accuse the president of grossly exaggerating the referendum's benefits to win votes and say he is using the referendum to consolidate his own power.

Some analysts said if the referendum failed, Uribe will find it harder to push through reforms in Congress.

http://i.cnn.net/cnn/2003/WORLD/americas/10/26/colombia.referendum.ap/story.colombia.vote.ap.jpg
Colombian voters line up Sunday at a polling station amid tight security.

NcDeuce
10-26-2003, 10:13 PM
Killings mar Colombia vote
Saturday, October 25, 2003 Posted: 1:32 PM EDT (1732 GMT)

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- Rebels launched a series of attacks Saturday, killing a soldier and four police officers, as Colombians voted on whether to adopt political reforms that President Alvaro Uribe said are needed to fight corruption and improve security.

The rebel attacks could be an attempt to discourage participation in the referendum, which has the strong backing of Colombia's hard-line president and, to be valid, requires the participation of at least 25 percent of registered voters, or 6.2 million people.

Gen. Jorge Enrique Mora, the commander of Colombia's armed forces, discounted the effects of the rebel attacks, which also included the burning of cars on a highway running from Colombia's third largest city, Cali, to Buenaventura on the Pacific coast.

"These threats will not interfere with Colombia's democratic fiesta," Mora told RCN radio.

The rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia have carried out attacks in an attempt to show the government does not control the countryside and to intimidate candidates running in state and municipal elections scheduled for Sunday.

FARC guerrillas attacked a base of the Colombian Army's Sixth Brigade in the western city of Ibague with explosives and gunfire early Saturday, killing one soldier and wounding two. In the village of Jambalo in southwest Colombia, four Colombian police officers were killed in a firefight with FARC rebels.

Even before the election-day violence, there were indications that voter apathy could undermine the referendum. A recent Gallup poll found that only 23 percent of voters will participate -- below the minimum needed.

"The referendum is not a miracle but it is a step against corruption and political misconduct," Uribe said before voting in Bogota's main Plaza Bolivar. "It is a step toward strengthening public order."

Colombia's popular president has campaigned tirelessly for the referendum, saying it is vital to defeat terrorism and prevent an Argentina-style economic collapse.

The 15 proposals in the referendum would give Uribe a freer hand to clamp down on corruption, ban tainted politicians from holding office, make congressional spending more accountable and cut the number of seats in Congress from 267 to 218.

It also includes plans to freeze public-sector salaries for at least two years and cap state pensions in an effort to trim spiraling deficits -- giving the government more money to spend on defense.

Moreover, a "yes" vote would be seen as a popular endorsement of Uribe's campaign to crush leftist guerrillas and destroy the illicit drug crops that supply them with cash to buy guns. A defeat, on the other hand, could weaken his political standing.

The measures are staunchly opposed by trade unions, leftist politicians and by some within the president's own party.

In an attempt to cast the referendum as a chance to save Colombia from financial disaster, Uribe likened the current situation to that of Argentina before its economy collapsed after defaulting on its debt in December 2001.

Opponents say his stark warnings are a desperate bid to win votes.

http://i.cnn.net/cnn/2003/WORLD/americas/10/25/colombia.referendum.ap/vert.uribe.ap.jpg
Uribe urges Colombians to vote 'yes' in Saturday referendum in televised speech on Friday.

Things are gettin' hairy.

Apogee
10-26-2003, 10:32 PM
I'm actually writing a paper on what we're doing down there. Its more about how we came to decide on Plan Columbia, but I'll post it whenever I finish it (which shouldn't be for a couple of weeks)

jdbjdb
10-26-2003, 10:33 PM
whenever they have elections, bombs start going off all over Bogata, is Bogota still the murder captial of the world?