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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-07-08 05:40 PM
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Improbable Database Of A Farc Commander
Improbable Database Of A Farc Commander
Raúl Reyes' Hard Drive
July 07, 2008 By Maurice Lemoine
Source: Le Monde diplomatique

Media attention following Ingrid Betancourt's dramatic release from captivity should not obscure a surprising revelation: laptop computers implausibly retrieved from an obliterating air raid on a Farc base in Colombia are being used to sour the country's relations with Ecuador and smear the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chávez, in western and Latin-American media.

The first of 10 smart bombs guided by GPS hit its target at 00.25 on 1 March 2008, less than two kilometres from the Ecuador-Colombia border, along the Putomayo river. Four Blackhawk OH-60 helicopters appeared out of the darkness with 44 special commandos from Colombia's rapid deployment force on board. But there was no fighting: the temporary camp of the Farc (the Marxist-inspired Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) had been destroyed by the explosions and 23 people killed in their sleep (1). Among them was Raúl Reyes, the Farc's second-in-command and the group's "foreign minister". His remains were taken back to Colombia by ground troops as a trophy.

Early that morning the Colombian president Alvaro Uribe contacted his Ecuadorian counterpart, Rafael Correa, to brief him on the raid: the Colombian airborne unit had been attacked from within Ecuador and had pursued the rebels in legitimate self-defence. But, he assured Correa, their return of fire came from Colombian territory and didn't violate Ecuador's airspace. Colombia's defence minister, Juan Manuel Santos, gave the same assurance later.

Initially Correa took Uribe at his word. Until this incident they had been on good terms and spoke on the phone every day. Two weeks before, Correa had said in private to one of the close advisers of the Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez: "Tell Chávez that I get on very well with Uribe and that if he wants I can help smooth things out between them." Correa felt betrayed, a feeling compounded when Ecuadorian military personnel arrived at the bombed camp: not only had the Colombians violated Ecuadorian territory, they had also, as Correa put it in a press conference on 2 March, conducted "a massacre".

Reyes' death sparked a crisis. Ecuador severed diplomatic relations with Colombia and deployed 11,000 men along its border. Venezuela also sent 10 battalions to its border. "We don't want war," Chávez warned, "but we won't allow the empire, nor its little dog , to weaken us." Nor were they willing to allow it to act with impunity on its neighbours' territory.

More:
http://www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/18120
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sourmilk Donating Member (512 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jul-07-08 07:25 PM
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1. Very interesting areticle. Thanks for posting.
I was wondering where the two hard drives came from...nice to know that there are others just as confused by the chain of events and accusations stemming from the Interpol "investigation" as I am.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-09-08 04:19 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. Most of what we're hearing about Latin America seems to be disinformation. You'll find this out the
Edited on Wed Jul-09-08 04:20 AM by Judi Lynn
more you study it.

Corporate media supports the exploitation of Latin America and maintainance of the dreadful situation which has been in place for decades, only starting to move in an organized way away from fascist right-wing scum puppets kept in place by U.S. interests.

Up until now there has been a completely successful pattern of dividing and conquering, attacking leftist movements and crushing them through manipulation of coups, juntas, dictators with almost no substantial opposition, as the suffering poor have not been powerful. Any time they finally elected a leftist leader, some idiot U.S. Republican President was able to destroy him and replace him with a bloodthirsty homicidal, racist sociopath.

Latin Americans are becoming resistant to this recurrent nightmare. They appear to seriously want another way of life.

If you haven't read it already, you'd get a very good introduction to this genocidal, cold, greedy manipulation of all the countries south of our border in reading Confessions of an Economic Hitman by John Perkins.

He has written one or two additional books since that one, as well. There are many others written on the subject, of course. You'll want to break through the news blackout we've been forced to endure through our own corporate media and the disinformation agenda.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jul-09-08 04:06 AM
Response to Original message
2. NDP slams Colombia deal's 'kill-unionist-pay-fine' clause
NDP slams Colombia deal's 'kill-unionist-pay-fine' clause

Jul 09, 2008 04:30 AM
Linda Diebel
National Affairs Writer

Federal New Democratic Party Leader Jack Layton says it's "simply outrageous" for Ottawa to sign a trade deal with Colombia with a clause calling for the South American nation to pay a fine to a special fund whenever a union activist is murdered.

It's not even clear how the fund would work. Nor would the Harper government give any details.

"This shouldn't have even been allowed to cross the first bureaucrat's desk," said Layton, whose party has launched a petition against the trade agreement over the summer.

In Colombia, where the army has been linked to the death squads, 28 trade unionists have been murdered so far this year, according to human rights organizations.

Union groups in Canada and the U.S. oppose any trade deal with the government of Alvaro Uribe.

More:
http://www.thestar.com/News/Canada/article/456896
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