From: "Stasi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [Peoples War] Colombia: Massacre's Shake Peace Deal - BBC

Thursday, 11 October, 2001, 07:24 GMT 08:24 UK

RealPlayer Audio:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1590000/audio/_1592718_columbia13_caistor.ram

Massacres shake Colombia peace deal
==========================
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1592000/1592718.stm
FARC had agreed to stop random kidnappings

In Colombia, over 40 people have been killed in recent attacks by right-wing
paramilitaries and Marxist guerrillas.
The worst killings took place in a village in the southern province of Cauca
River valley, where paramilitaries of the United Self-Defence Forces of
Colombia (AUC) shot dead at least 17 men.

In Santa Marta, on the Caribbean coast, the bodies of six kidnapped
fishermen were discovered, all of them with gunshot wounds.

And two policemen recently taken in a mass kidnapping by guerrillas of the
leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) have also been killed.

Killed in front of families

General Fernando Tapias, commander of Colombia's armed forces, said that 17
people were confirmed dead in attacks in the village of Buga in the Cauca
River valley.

But witnesses and local reporters say that as many as 30 were killed, with
many of the men being shot in front of their families.

The paramilitary AUC had previously killed civilians whom they suspected of
aiding leftist rebels who have been waging a 37-year war against the
Colombian state.

Since the beginning of July, 303 people have been killed as a result of
Colombia's continuing violence, the Defence Ministry said.

Of those 199 are thought to have been killed by the AUC. The US Government,
which is providing millions of dollars in military aid to the Colombian
Government, recently added the AUC to its list of terrorist organisations.

Fragile agreement

There are fears that the killings of two policemen kidnapped by FARC members
could destroy the fragile agreement signed last Friday in which the FARC's
rebel leaders agreed to stop their practice of random kidnappings on
highways.

"This could really be the end of the negotiation process," said Eduardo
Cifuentes, the government's Human Rights Ombudsman.

Colombian Government forces have been fighting both leftist guerrillas, such
as the FARC, and right-wing paramilitaries, for decades in the country's
civil war.

The government has been negotiating with the FARC since late 1998 to end the
violence, but the talks have failed to yield any substantial results.

So far this year over 1,000 people have been murdered by paramilitary death
squads.




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