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Colombia: paramilitary chief says he supported Uribe's election

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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-15-10 02:37 AM
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Colombia: paramilitary chief says he supported Uribe's election
Colombia: paramilitary chief says he supported Uribe's election

Submitted by WW4 Report on Fri, 05/14/2010 - 14:55. Through a closed-circuit satellite link from a US federal prison in Virginia, where he is facing drug trafficking charges, former Colombian paramilitary chief Salvatore Mancuso asserted to a panel of his country's Supreme Court in Bogotá April 29 that his illegal forces supported Álvaro Uribe's election in 2002. He is now the fourth paramilitary chief to make the claim. Mancuso also declared that he participated in a plot against former Supreme Court magistrate Iván Velásquez, who was the leading judge investigating the Uribe government's collaboration with paramilitary groups.

Mancuso also stated that he met with leading presidential candidate Juan Manuel Santos twice in 1997, as part of a plot to overthrow then-president Ernesto Samper. Santos, he said, arrived at one meeting accompanied by prominent emerald dealer Victor Carranza, long suspected of being himself a paramilitary leader. (Semana, Bogotá, April 29)

Despite guarantees, only six of the fourteen former top paramilitary leaders who were extradited to the US two years ago have been able to participate in Colombia's Justice and Peace process. Colombian officials working on the Justice and Peace process told Caracol Radio that the extradition of the paramilitary leaders has hampered the program's efforts to offer justice to victims of paramilitaries.

According to the sources, of the fourteen extradited men, only Mancuso, Diego Fernando Murillo AKA "Don Berna", Miguel Angel Mejia Munera AKA "El Mellizo", Guillermo Pérez Alzate AKA "Pablo Sevillano" and Ramiro Vanoy AKA "Cuco Vanoy" have been able to testify via satellite from the US.

More:
http://www.ww4report.com/node/8618
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-15-10 07:24 AM
Response to Original message
1. Gosh, you could just knock me over with a feather.
:sarcasm:
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protocol rv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-15-10 09:01 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Me too
Uribe swears he's going to exterminate the FARC, and he receives aid from the FARC's sworn enemies. What a surprise. :evilgrin:
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-15-10 02:46 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. Colombian paramilitaries are listed internationally as terrorists. n/t
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protocol rv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-15-10 04:37 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. That's right
So are the FARC. The paramilitaries helped whoever was going to take the FARC out, and then most of them went in and surrendered. It was a smart move for them.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-15-10 02:44 PM
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3. Supreme Court seeks investigation into Uribe's paramilitary ties
Supreme Court seeks investigation into Uribe's paramilitary ties
Friday, 07 May 2010 14:59 Kirsten Begg

Colombia's Supreme Court asked the House of Representatives' Investigative Commission Friday to investigate allegations by extradited former paramilitary boss Salvatore Mancuso that Colombian President Alvaro Uribe has links to the paramilitaries, reports Santa Fe Radio.

The court provided the Congress commission with testimony provided by Mancuso, in which he alleges that high ranking army officials and politicians met with paramilitaries to discuss supporting Uribe's 2002 bid for the presidency.

During during a Supreme Court hearing a week previously, Mancuso said that several of the illegal militias' leaders met in 2001 at a conference of paramilitary organization the AUC, and spoke about the need to support "a candidate with an ideology akin to that of the paramilitaries" on issues like security and combating rebels.

According to the testimony, military operations were suspended in order to allow paramilitary groups to "seek support" for Uribe. Mancuso also alleges that paramilitaries funded Uribe's 2002 election campaign.

This is the first time that Mancuso has directly alleged that paramilitaries were involved in Uribe's election campaign. Other paramilitaries, such as Freddy Rendon Herrera, alias "El Aleman," Francisco Villalba alias "Cristian Barreto," and Miguel Angel Mejia, alias "El Mellizo," have previously made the same allegations.

http://www.colombiareports.com/colombia-news/news/9607-supreme-court-asks-colombian-congress-to-invesigate-uribe-for-paramilitary-ties.html
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-15-10 04:51 PM
Response to Original message
6. Colombia in denial about errors of paramilitary demobilization
Colombia in denial about errors of paramilitary demobilization
Friday, 05 February 2010 08:04 Pablo Rojas Mejia

Last week, I wrote a column on Colombia’s urban crime problem. Colombia Reports readers commented on it with interesting points about the causes of the current crime wave. Some wrote about a culture of illegality and corruption that hinders crime fighting. Others suggested that socioeconomic conditions – poverty, unemployment, and inequality – are fuelling the ongoing violence. Both views shed light on the obstacles to lasting peace in Colombia’s cities, but questions remain about what sparked this crime wave in the first place.

If, for example, a longstanding culture of illegality, corruption and mistrust of the authorities is behind the crime wave, why has crime started to rise in the past two years and not before that? If poverty and inequality caused crime rates to go up, why was the increase most dramatic in Medellin, which has some of Colombia’s most effective social programs?

This week, a Human Rights Watch report helped shed light on the issue. HRW, a well-known international NGO, released a report about the new generation of paramilitary militias in Colombia, which was highly critical of the government’s demobilization scheme. Interestingly, the report also revealed the link between the recent re-emergence of paramilitarism in Colombia and the rising rates of crime and violence in major cities.

That link has been common knowledge in many circles for years. Medellin officials, including former mayor Sergio Fajardo, knew that much of their city was controlled by paramilitaries, but they hoped that through social programs they could gradually erode that criminal power structure. Indeed, local crime rates shot up inexplicably soon after the paramilitary warlord known as "Don Berna," who ruled Medellin’s underworld, was extradited to the United States. Looking back, it is clear the power vacuum he left behind set off the very gang warfare that plagues the city today. In other words, the failure of paramilitary demobilization is one of the reasons why crime is rising in Medellin today, and the same can be said, to a lesser extent, about other Colombian cities.

Why did the demobilization program fail to put an end to Colombian paramilitarism?

When the right-wing paramilitaries began to demobilize during the first years of the Uribe presidency, they were responsible for the majority of organized criminal activity in Colombia. They controlled large swaths of the country’s territory, including urban areas, and ruled over a vast, nationally integrated criminal empire, often with the support and tolerance of the authorities. With the demobilization of most paramilitary groups having happened years ago, Colombia was supposed to have entered a post-paramilitary era. Their criminal enterprises were supposedly dismantled and their strongholds brought under the control of the state.

At least two problems have derailed the demobilization scheme. One is the fact that many mid-level paramilitary leaders slipped through the (massive) cracks in the program, did not demobilize and have since taken over the drug trade. Indeed, there is evidence that many paramilitary leaders, including some who demobilized, prepared for a possible regrouping and instructed mid-level warlords to keep control of drug trafficking operations. Slowly but surely, their neo-paramilitary drug gangs have taken the place of the old paramilitary structures in many parts of Colombia and, as the HRW report shows, they continue to violate human rights. Many - but not all - of the foot soldiers for these emerging gangs are demobilized paramilitaries.

The second problem is that, in many parts of Colombia, the security forces have not challenged the power of paramilitary groups, but instead continue to tolerate and support them. In some cases, neo-paramilitary drug gangs have corrupted the security forces. In others, the authorities continue to ally themselves with paramilitary groups in the fight against guerrillas. Rather than attack the remnants of the paramilitary power structure and the drug trafficking activities that fund it, some members of the security forces have allowed them to reemerge.

In short, without sufficient mechanisms in place to prevent the rebirth of Colombian paramilitarism, the demobilization scheme has allowed former warlords to reconsolidate the paramilitary power structures. Impunity, drug money, government corruption and the continued tolerance of paramilitarism on the part of lower-ranking military and government officials are helping to create a new generation of Colombian paramilitaries.

For Colombia’s cities, the failure of the national demobilization scheme to put an end to paramilitarism means that the corruption and violence associated with organized crime will likely continue to increase. Medellin is an extreme case, but other major cities are under threat as well. Today, petty street crime is a more serious concern in Cali than mafia warfare, but at least part of the recent rise in the city’s homicide rate has to do with its strategic location in Colombia’s south-west, home to many important drug gangs and neo-paramilitary groups. Some of these groups also have “blocs” operating in Bogota, where they are allegedly involved in extortion, drug dealing and social cleansing as well as the harassment of journalists, union leaders and human rights activists.

More:
http://colombiareports.com/opinion/the-colombiamerican/8058-colombia-in-denial-about-errors-made-with-paramilitary-demobilization.html
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