----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2000 8:32 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO] Clinton "The New Viceroy" Scared Off Bogota Visit


STOP NATO: �NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.COM

http://www.foxnews.com/world/081400/colombia_clinton.sml


"Cartegena was built by the Spanish and the United
States is the new colonial power. Clinton is the new
viceroy."

Fox News
Colombia Capital Seen Too Risky for Clinton Visit
Monday, August 14, 2000 By Karl Penhaul
BOGOTA - A car bomb in Bogota at the weekend
highlighted why U.S. President Bill Clinton will not
come to the capital on a visit to war-torn Colombia
this month but instead stay in a coastal resort
further from security threats posed by Marxist rebels
and narco-traffickers.

Jose Miguel Gomez/Reuters


The Colombian government does not publicly recognize
it has lost control over some sectors of Bogota, a
city of 6 million inhabitants which is increasingly in
the sights of the country's main Communist rebel
force.

Officials have attributed the decision to host the
visit - the first to Colombia by a U.S. president in a
decade - in the colonial Caribbean city of Cartagena
on Aug. 30 to logistic reasons, namely traffic
congestion in Bogota.

But diplomats, including a former U.S. ambassador to
Colombia, believe Bogota would be too dangerous given
a recent surge in the long-running guerrilla war and
the potential risk posed by notoriously violent drug
mobs, many of whose jailed leaders now face
extradition to the United States.

Anti-American sentiment is running high among the
country's guerrilla groups and leftist unions after
the U.S. Congress approved in June Clinton's call for
a record $1.3 billion package of mostly military aid
to help Colombia fight drugs and the rebels.

On Sunday, a rebel car bomb rocked a military convoy,
injuring one soldier, as it passed through Ciudad
Bolivar, a poor neighborhood in the southern district
of the capital.

"Cartagena is very safe. Public order has been
deteriorating in Colombia. Obviously the secret
service is not going to want to put the (U.S.)
president in an environment where there's a risk of
him being hurt," Myles Frechette, who was U.S.
ambassador in Bogota from 1994 to late 1997, told
Reuters by phone on Monday.

"In recent months, the guerrillas have perpetrated
attacks around Bogota and yesterday's car bombing is a
good example of that," Frechette added.

Urban Guerrilla Cells

The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC),
Latin America's largest surviving 1960s rebel force,
has active urban militia units in Bogota, especially
in southern slum areas.

The FARC's urban militias have regrouped and retrained
since most of its top commanders were killed in
fighting with the army in 1996. They have vowed to
bring the three-decade-old war, which has cost some
35,000 lives in just the last 10 years, from the
countryside into the city.

In addition, at least five FARC combat units,
comprising some 2,000 fighters from a nationwide total
of around 17,000, are based in the mountains ringing
Bogota. A year ago, heavy fighting just south of the
capital sparked fears the rebels may be preparing to
attack an army base just inside the city limits.

Drug traffickers, too, have struck in Bogota. In
November, six people died and more than 20 others were
injured when suspected narco-traffickers detonated a
powerful car bomb in northern Bogota.

The blast came the day the Supreme Court ruled a
Colombian capo could be sent for trial in the United
States - the first extradition in eight years.

Anti-American Protests

Besides the risk of violence, the Communist Party and
some of the main labor organizations are planning Aug.
30 massive demonstrations in downtown Bogota, and a
smaller one in Cartagena, to protest what they see as
U.S. intervention.

Other practical concerns also appear to have
influenced the choice of Cartagena - often selected
for summits by a security-conscious government - as
the venue for day-long talks between President Andres
Pastrana and Clinton.

The city is an hour's flying time closer to the United
States and Cartagena's imposing colonial architecture
will provide a picturesque photo opportunity, unlike
Bogota's grimy streets.

For opponents of U.S. policy in Colombia the choice of
Cartagena is also highly symbolic.

"Cartagena was built by the Spanish and the United
States is the new colonial power," said Communist
party No. 2 Carlos Lozano. "Clinton is the new
viceroy."


__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail - Free email you can access from anywhere!
http://mail.yahoo.com/


______________________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

FREE SHIPPING OR FREE SUNGLASSES at wonderfulbuys.com!  We're giving
free shipping on all our great buys plus get free sunglasses.  Also,
register to win a Total Gym 3000 ($1000.00 retail value).  Click now,
limited time offer.

http://www.bcentral.com/listbot/wonderfulbuys


Reply via email to