From: "Stasi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 16 Aug 2001 02:25:14 +0100
To: "Peoples War" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Peoples War] Colombia: FARC's 16,000 Guerrillas Control 40% Of
Colombia - Irish Times

Wednesday, August 15, 2001

FARC's 16,000 guerrillas control 40% of Colombia
===================================
http://www.ireland.com/

By Michael McCaughan
Colombia's Revolutionary Armed Forces (FARC) consist of 16,000 well-armed
troops who control 40 per cent of national territory, most it sparsely
populated.

In rural areas rebel leaders veto the appointment of government officials
and negotiate border issues with Venezuelan customs, tacit acknowledgment of
their status as sole authority in the area.

The roots of the FARC lie in armed self-defence groups which protected rural
communities displaced by government violence. Colombia's liberal and
conservative parties engaged in a bloody power struggle in 1948-52, which
cost 250,000 lives.

Thousands of Colombians fled into remote hillsides where they formed
self-sufficient "independent republics" controlled by Colombia's Communist
Party, which refused to be drawn into the war.

The republics offered a peaceful if frugal farming existence to their
members, who adapted to the tough mountain conditions, trading goods with
communities living under government rule.

The two main parties eventually established a power-sharing arrangement in
1958 and set about destroying their communist rivals, fearing the threat of
autonomous economic development beyond state control.

The government sent a third of the armed forces into the enclaves, which
were effectively destroyed in 1963. A group of outraged farmers resisted the
Colombian army and then turned professional in 1964, calling their group the
FARC.

Unlike other rebel movements in Latin America, the FARC leadership is
largely peasant-based, making it more difficult to buy off. In the past 37
years the FARC has undergone several major transformations, including one
ill-fated attempt to launch a political party, Union Patriotica (UP).

This initiative in the 1990s failed when the entire active UP membership was
picked off one by one by assassins as they attempted to engage in democratic
politics.

The short-lived experiment with democratic politics gave way to a new
militarist mood which coincided with the increase in funds provided by mass
kidnappings and taxes levied on drug shipments in areas under guerrilla
influence.

Colombia's cocaine trade has fuelled wars and corrupted democratic
institutions as business people, politicians, judges and journalists are
bought off or killed by drug lords.

The successful reinvention of the FARC, achieved mainly through military
action, has produced a new generation of leaders who are largely indifferent
to public opinion. The on/off peace process which began in January 1999 has
so far achieved only a prisoner swap between rebels and police.

The FARC has pioneered a range of home-made explosives, including the
bicycle-bomb, the donkey-bomb and the housebomb, the latter consisting of
piles of explosives stored in a building close to a military target then
detonated to coincide with a ground attack.

However, the media portrayal of the FARC as a gang of bloodthirsty,
drug-dealing outlaws could just as well apply to the security forces sent to
combat them.

The Colombian army has been indicted by international rights groups for
"grave and persistent" human rights abuses, including torture and killing of
political suspects. Right-wing paramilitaries, with logistical help from the
army, have massacred entire villages, declaring anyone living in areas of
rebel influence to be legitimate targets.

The FARC's charismatic leader, Manuel Marulanda, is an old man who has spent
50 years in the hills, outlasting a dozen presidents who swore to kill him.

The rebels have forced drug-traffickers to pay better wages to coca farmers
and also intervened in labour disputes, burning Smurfit-owned vehicles in a
dispute with the Irish multinational, which has offices in south-west
Colombia.

The roots of the FARC may officially lie in the 1950s displacement of rural
farmers, but the movement thrives today because inequality, poverty and
state terror also flourish.







"Without a Peoples Army the people have nothing"
Mao


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