From: IBS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--------------0682702E5C61A62398575857
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Ingrid Washinawatok, 41, a member of the Menominee nation in Wisconsin,
along with her 3 companions, has been found dead. Some of you may have
been following this in the news. Please find a moment in your day to
pray for her spirit, her husband, and all those who loved her. Her
husband is Ali El Issa.� Several top AIM members have become involed in
this. And special prayers were held for her safe return, including one
led by Arvol Looking Horse. Sadly, the final outcome is nothing short of
horrific.
thank you -
ibs
http://cnn.com/WORLD/americas/9903/06/colombia.bodies.01/��������� (this
one is the most recent one)
� FBI joins probe of killings of Americans at Colombia- Venezuela border
�� March 6, 1999� Web posted at: 5:21 a.m. EST (1021 GMT)
����������������� BOGOTA, Colombia (CNN) -- FBI
����������������� agents are due to attend autopsies on
����������������� Saturday for three Americans found
����������������� beaten, tortured and shot to death on
����������������� the Colombia-Venezuela border.
����������������� The bound and blindfolded victims
����������������� were believed to have been
����������������� kidnapped last week by Colombian
����������������� rebels. Their bodies were discovered late Thursday.
����������������� The U.S. State Department blamed Colombia's largest
rebel group, the
����������������� Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia (FARC), for the
killings.
����������������� The bodies will be examined at a morgue in the
regional capital of San
����������������� Cristobal, near the Colombian border.
����������������� "We condemn the FARC in the strongest possible terms
for this barbaric
����������������� terrorist act," State Department spokesman Lee
McClenny said. "We also
����������������� demand that the FARC accept responsibility for this
cold-blooded murder
����������������� and turn over those of its members who perpetrated
this crime to be held
����������������� accountable by the courts."
����������������������������������������������� McClenny called on the
Colombian
����������������������������������������������� government to arrest the
killers and
����������������������������������������������� extradite them to the
United States.
����������������������������������������������� The State Department
confirmed the
����������������������������������������������� identities of the three
victims on
����������������������������������������������� Friday. The dead were:
Ingrid
����������������������������������������������� Washinawatok, 41, an
American
����������������������������������������������� Indian from Wisconsin,
Terence
����������������������������������������������� Freitas, a 24-year-old
����������������� environmentalist from Los Angeles, and 39-year-old
Lahe'ena'e Gay of
����������������� Hawaii.
����������������� The three were kidnapped on February 25 in Arauca
state in northeastern
����������������� Colombia while on a mission to help organize schools
for the indigenous
����������������� U'wa people. They had traveled under the auspices of
the Hawaii-based
����������������� Pacific Cultural Conservancy International, which Gay
directed, and were
����������������� studying the U'wa to determine whether they might be
able to assist them.
����������������� No one claimed responsibility for the kidnapping, but
an U'wa representative
����������������� who was with the Americans when they were seized,
Roberto Afanador,
����������������� said he suspected FARC. Afanador said FARC frequently
enters the U'wa
����������������� reserve without permission.
����������������� FARC, which is blamed for about 60 percent of
Colombia's 2,000 annual
����������������� abductions, rarely admits its kidnappings. Last year,
the group kidnapped
����������������� four Americans but released them unharmed without
demanding ransom
����������������� after a month of captivity.
����������������� "This case was a bit unusual. Nobody expected this
outcome," Quil
����������������� Lawrence, a journalist in the region, told CNN.
����������������� Freitas' mother, Julie Freitas of Los Angeles, said
she was "totally
����������������� devastated" by her son's murder.
����������������� "I'm proud of my son," she said. "He lived the life
that he wanted to live. He
����������������� had such a passion for the indigenous culture ... and
he risked his life
����������������� preserving that culture."
����������������� The U'wa, a nation of 8,000 people, won a legal battle
against Occidental
����������������� Petroleum in 1997 that prevented the oil company from
exploratory drilling
����������������� on traditional U'wa territory.
������������������������������ The Associated Press contributed to this
report.
����������������� RELATED STORIES:
���������������������� Kidnap victims in Colombia working to help
Indians, relatives say
���������������������� March 2, 1999
����������������� RELATED SITES:
���������������������� Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC)
���������������������� Colombia General Information
���������������������� Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
���������������������� External sites are not endorsed by CNN
Interactive.
earlier articles:
(1 - 2 of 2)
Colombian Indians call on rebels to free Americans� (Reuters)
BOGOTA, March 1 (Reuters) - Colombia's U'wa Indians called on Monday for
the release of three
Americans who were kidnapped by Marxist rebels while on a visit to
tribal homelands in an oil-rich
corner of the northeast last week. Terence Freitas, 24, an environmental
scientist from Santa Cruz,
California, Ingrid Washinawatok, 41, a native American of the Menominee
tribe in Wisconsin, and Lahe'ena'e Gay,
39, of Hawaii, were abducted last Thursday.
- Mar 01 8:29 PM ESTMonday
March 1, 8:29 pm Eastern Time
Colombian Indians call on rebels to free Americans
BOGOTA, March 1 (Reuters) - Colombia's U'wa Indians called on Monday for
the release of three Americans who were kidnapped by Marxist rebels
while on a
visit to tribal homelands in an oil-rich corner of the northeast last
week.
Terence Freitas, 24, an environmental scientist from Santa Cruz,
California, Ingrid
Washinawatok, 41, a native American of the Menominee tribe in Wisconsin,
and
Lahe'ena'e Gay, 39, of Hawaii, were abducted last Thursday.
Police said guerrillas from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC), Latin America's oldest and largest
rebel army, seized the trio as they headed to the northeast town of
Saravena to take a flight back to Bogota.
They had spent about two weeks with the U'wa, whose territory spans the
plains of Arauca and the mountains of
Boyaca, Santander and North Santander provinces.
The U'wa are fighting plans by U.S. multinational Occidental Petroleum
Corp OXY.N to explore for oil near the
U'wa's ancestral lands.
Cruz, Washinawatok and Gay were members of an international campaign
team trying to force Occidental to
abandon plans to drill for oil in the so-called Samore block.
``Terence, Ingrid and Lahe'ena'e have been working on the defense of
U'wa territory which is being affected by the
process of oil exploration,'' said U'wa spokesman Evarista Tegria in a
phone interview with Reuters.
``The FARC took them out of our hands and must now put them back safely
in our hands. They are our ambassadors
on an international level,'' he added.
Freitas is the head of a Los Angeles-based campaign team for the defense
of U'wa lands. He has visited the U'wa at
least five times in the last three years, said Tegria.
Gay is director of Hawaii-based Pacific Cultural Conservancy
International, which sponsored the trip to Colombia,
and Washinawatok was described as a humanitarian, according to a
statement issued by the families of the three.
``With the invitation of the U'wa people they went with peaceful
intentions to Colombia,'' the statement said. ``We
their families are united in hoping and praying for their immediate
release and safe return.''
All sides in Colombia's four-decade-old civil conflict, that has claimed
more than 35,000 lives in the last 10 years
alone, are frequently accused of targeting indigenous groups. It is the
first time, however, that American and European
activists working with the U'wa have been kidnapped, Tegria said.
The FARC and the smaller National Liberation Army (ELN), however, are
like the U'was, opposed to multinationals
drilling for petroleum in Colombia, arguing that they play an excessive
role in Colombia's oil industry.
The FARC have not claimed responsibility for abducting the Americans but
regularly take hostages, including
foreigners, and use ransom payments to finance their war on the
government.
Colombia has one of the highest kidnapping rates anywhere in the world.
Last year, a record 2,400 abductions were
reported. At least half those were blamed on the country's three main
rebel groups. Some 20 foreigners are currently
believed to being held by the guerrillas.
Related News Categories: politics, US Market News
********************************************
Americans Kidnapped in Colombia� (Associated Press)
The three Americans kidnapped by suspected leftist rebels in remote
northeastern Colombia last week were on a
mission to help preserve the cultural identity of an Indian group,
co-workers and relatives said Monday.
- Mar 01 8:07 PM EST
Monday March 1 8:05 PM ET
Americans Kidnapped in Colombia
By FRANK BAJAK Associated Press Writer
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - The three Americans kidnapped by suspected
leftist rebels in remote northeastern
Colombia last week were on a mission to help preserve the cultural
identity of an Indian group, co-workers and
relatives said Monday.
The three Americans, seized Thursday 200 miles from Bogota by armed men
in civilian clothing, had spent a week on
the U'wa reservation under the auspices of the Hawaii-based Pacific
Cultural Conservancy International.
``Their sole mission in Colombia was to learn the conditions and needs
of their host, the U'wa people,'' relatives said
in a fax received by The Associated Press.
Larry Brown, the conservation group's manager, said the three were
studying the U'wa, who live in remote jungles
near the Venezuelan border, to determine whether they might be able to
assist them.
``Our types of programs are designed to preserve the cultural integrity
of indigenous people - and they are typically
educational in nature,'' Brown said by telephone from Hawaii.
Seized were the group's director, 39-year-old Lahe'ena'e Gay along with
Ingrid Washinawatok, 41, a Menominee
Indian from Wisconsin, and Terence Freitas, a 24-year-old
environmentalist who has worked extensively with the
U'wa.
No group claimed responsibility for the abduction, but several leftist
rebel bands operate in the area where the three
were seized.
In Washington, State Department spokesman James Foley said the U.S.
Embassy in Bogota was ``working
vigorously with Colombian authorities to secure their immediate and safe
release.''
Foley also reiterated a State Department warning against unnecessary
travel in Colombia because of the threat of
kidnapping and murder of Americans.
A U'wa representative who was with the Americans when they were seized,
Roberto Afanador, said he suspected the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, the country's oldest
and largest rebel group. Afanador said the
FARC frequently enters the U'Wa reserve without permission.
``They came to study our culture, our territory,'' said Afanador. ``The
indigenous authorities are very upset by this
because our territory is not respected. We are humiliated. We are
abused.''
The U'wa, a fiercely proud nation of some 8,000 people, won a legal
battle against Occidental Petroleum in 1997 that
prevented the Los Angeles-based company from exploratory drilling on
traditional U'wa territory.
***********************************
>From Alt.Native:
Just in from World News:
" The three Americans kidnapped by suspected leftist rebels in remote
northeastern Colombia last week were on a mission to help preserve the
cultural
identity of an Indian group, co-workers and relatives said Monday.
� The three Americans, seized Thursday 200 miles from Bogota by armed
men in
civilian clothing, had spent a week on the U'wa reservation under the
auspices
of the Hawaii based Pacific Cultural Conservancy International.
� Seized were the group's directror, 39 year old Lahe'ena'e Gay along
with
Ingrid Washinawatok, 41, a Menominee Indian from Wisconsin, and Terence
Freitas, a 24 year old environmentalist who has worked extensively with
the
U'wa.
� A tribal member also was captured.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
COLOMBIA SUPPORT NETWORK just received the following information from
the
Native American Council of New York : that INGRID WASHINAWATOK , a
member
of the Menomonie Nation of Wisconsin and a representative of the United
Nations International Working Group on Indigenous Rights, was kidnapped
on
February 25th at 10 p.m. in the morning by FARC� guerrillas when she was
on
her way to visit the indigenous U'Wa Community in Colombia. FARC� has
acknowledged the kidnapping in a fax sent to the United States Embassy
in
Bogota. This is all the available information that Colombia Support
Network
has at this moment on Friday, February 26th at 6:20 p.m. Central
Standard
Time. Any further information will be immediately released.
COLOMBIA SUPPORT NETWORK strongly protests this outrageous violation� of
this individual's human rights and demands her immediate release.
> should you wish to voice your outrage:
Please send faxes to :
ANDRES PASTRANA ARANGO
Presidente de la Rep�blica
Kra.8 n.7-26� Santa Fe de Bogot�
Tlf: 571/ 284 33 00�� Fax: 571/ 286 74 34 - 286 79 37 - 284 21 86
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MONSIGNOR ALBERTO GIRALDO
Presidente Conferencia Episcopal
Carrera 47 # 84 - 85
Santafe de Bogota
Fax : 011 57 1 311 5058
Colombia Support Network
P.O. Box 1505
Madison, WI 53701
(608) 257-8753�� fax (608) 255-6621
[EMAIL PROTECTED]��� http://www.igc.apc.org/csn/
***************
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/world/DailyNews/colombia990305.html
--------------0682702E5C61A62398575857
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Ingrid Washinawatok, 41, a member of the Menominee nation in Wisconsin, along with her 3 companions, has been found dead. Some of you may have been following this in the news. Please find a moment in your day to pray for her spirit, her husband, and all those who loved her. Her husband is Ali El Issa.� Several top AIM members have become involed in this. And special prayers were held for her safe return, including one led by Arvol Looking Horse. Sadly, the final outcome is nothing short of horrific.
thank you -
ibs
http://cnn.com/WORLD/americas/9903/06/colombia.bodies.01/��������� (this one is the most recent one)
� FBI joins probe of killings of Americans at Colombia- Venezuela border
�� March 6, 1999� Web posted at: 5:21 a.m. EST (1021 GMT)
����������������� BOGOTA, Colombia (CNN) -- FBI
����������������� agents are due to attend autopsies on
����������������� Saturday for three Americans found
����������������� beaten, tortured and shot to death on
����������������� the Colombia-Venezuela border.
����������������� The bound and blindfolded victims
����������������� were believed to have been
����������������� kidnapped last week by Colombian
����������������� rebels. Their bodies were discovered late Thursday.
����������������� The U.S. State Department blamed Colombia's largest rebel group, the
����������������� Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia (FARC), for the killings.
����������������� The bodies will be examined at a morgue in the regional capital of San
����������������� Cristobal, near the Colombian border.
����������������� "We condemn the FARC in the strongest possible terms for this barbaric
����������������� terrorist act," State Department spokesman Lee McClenny said. "We also
����������������� demand that the FARC accept responsibility for this cold-blooded murder
����������������� and turn over those of its members who perpetrated this crime to be held
����������������� accountable by the courts."
����������������������������������������������� McClenny called on the Colombian
����������������������������������������������� government to arrest the killers and
����������������������������������������������� extradite them to the United States.
����������������������������������������������� The State Department confirmed the
����������������������������������������������� identities of the three victims on
����������������������������������������������� Friday. The dead were: Ingrid
����������������������������������������������� Washinawatok, 41, an American
����������������������������������������������� Indian from Wisconsin, Terence
����������������������������������������������� Freitas, a 24-year-old
����������������� environmentalist from Los Angeles, and 39-year-old Lahe'ena'e Gay of
����������������� Hawaii.
����������������� The three were kidnapped on February 25 in Arauca state in northeastern
����������������� Colombia while on a mission to help organize schools for the indigenous
����������������� U'wa people. They had traveled under the auspices of the Hawaii-based
����������������� Pacific Cultural Conservancy International, which Gay directed, and were
����������������� studying the U'wa to determine whether they might be able to assist them.
����������������� No one claimed responsibility for the kidnapping, but an U'wa representative
����������������� who was with the Americans when they were seized, Roberto Afanador,
����������������� said he suspected FARC. Afanador said FARC frequently enters the U'wa
����������������� reserve without permission.
����������������� FARC, which is blamed for about 60 percent of Colombia's 2,000 annual
����������������� abductions, rarely admits its kidnappings. Last year, the group kidnapped
����������������� four Americans but released them unharmed without demanding ransom
����������������� after a month of captivity.
����������������� "This case was a bit unusual. Nobody expected this outcome," Quil
����������������� Lawrence, a journalist in the region, told CNN.
����������������� Freitas' mother, Julie Freitas of Los Angeles, said she was "totally
����������������� devastated" by her son's murder.
����������������� "I'm proud of my son," she said. "He lived the life that he wanted to live. He
����������������� had such a passion for the indigenous culture ... and he risked his life
����������������� preserving that culture."
����������������� The U'wa, a nation of 8,000 people, won a legal battle against Occidental
����������������� Petroleum in 1997 that prevented the oil company from exploratory drilling
����������������� on traditional U'wa territory.
������������������������������ The Associated Press contributed to this report.
�
����������������� RELATED STORIES:
���������������������� Kidnap victims in Colombia working to help Indians, relatives say
���������������������� March 2, 1999
�
����������������� RELATED SITES:
���������������������� Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC)
���������������������� Colombia General Information
���������������������� Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
���������������������� External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.
�
�
earlier articles:
(1 - 2 of 2)
Colombian Indians call on rebels to free Americans� (Reuters)
BOGOTA, March 1 (Reuters) - Colombia's U'wa Indians called on Monday for the release of three
Americans who were kidnapped by Marxist rebels while on a visit to tribal homelands in an oil-rich
corner of the northeast last week. Terence Freitas, 24, an environmental scientist from Santa Cruz,
California, Ingrid Washinawatok, 41, a native American of the Menominee tribe in Wisconsin, and Lahe'ena'e Gay,
39, of Hawaii, were abducted last Thursday.
- Mar 01 8:29 PM ESTMonday
March 1, 8:29 pm Eastern Time
Colombian Indians call on rebels to free Americans
BOGOTA, March 1 (Reuters) - Colombia's U'wa Indians called on Monday for
the release of three Americans who were kidnapped by Marxist rebels while on a
visit to tribal homelands in an oil-rich corner of the northeast last week.
Terence Freitas, 24, an environmental scientist from Santa Cruz, California, Ingrid
Washinawatok, 41, a native American of the Menominee tribe in Wisconsin, and
Lahe'ena'e Gay, 39, of Hawaii, were abducted last Thursday.
Police said guerrillas from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), Latin America's oldest and largest
rebel army, seized the trio as they headed to the northeast town of Saravena to take a flight back to Bogota.
They had spent about two weeks with the U'wa, whose territory spans the plains of Arauca and the mountains of
Boyaca, Santander and North Santander provinces.
The U'wa are fighting plans by U.S. multinational Occidental Petroleum Corp OXY.N to explore for oil near the
U'wa's ancestral lands.
Cruz, Washinawatok and Gay were members of an international campaign team trying to force Occidental to
abandon plans to drill for oil in the so-called Samore block.
``Terence, Ingrid and Lahe'ena'e have been working on the defense of U'wa territory which is being affected by the
process of oil exploration,'' said U'wa spokesman Evarista Tegria in a phone interview with Reuters.
``The FARC took them out of our hands and must now put them back safely in our hands. They are our ambassadors
on an international level,'' he added.
Freitas is the head of a Los Angeles-based campaign team for the defense of U'wa lands. He has visited the U'wa at
least five times in the last three years, said Tegria.
Gay is director of Hawaii-based Pacific Cultural Conservancy International, which sponsored the trip to Colombia,
and Washinawatok was described as a humanitarian, according to a statement issued by the families of the three.
``With the invitation of the U'wa people they went with peaceful intentions to Colombia,'' the statement said. ``We
their families are united in hoping and praying for their immediate release and safe return.''
All sides in Colombia's four-decade-old civil conflict, that has claimed more than 35,000 lives in the last 10 years
alone, are frequently accused of targeting indigenous groups. It is the first time, however, that American and European
activists working with the U'wa have been kidnapped, Tegria said.
The FARC and the smaller National Liberation Army (ELN), however, are like the U'was, opposed to multinationals
drilling for petroleum in Colombia, arguing that they play an excessive role in Colombia's oil industry.
The FARC have not claimed responsibility for abducting the Americans but regularly take hostages, including
foreigners, and use ransom payments to finance their war on the government.
Colombia has one of the highest kidnapping rates anywhere in the world. Last year, a record 2,400 abductions were
reported. At least half those were blamed on the country's three main rebel groups. Some 20 foreigners are currently
believed to being held by the guerrillas.
�
�Related News Categories: politics, US Market News
********************************************
Americans Kidnapped in Colombia� (Associated Press)
The three Americans kidnapped by suspected leftist rebels in remote northeastern Colombia last week were on a
mission to help preserve the cultural identity of an Indian group, co-workers and relatives said Monday.
- Mar 01 8:07 PM EST
Monday March 1 8:05 PM ET
Americans Kidnapped in Colombia
By FRANK BAJAK Associated Press Writer
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - The three Americans kidnapped by suspected leftist rebels in remote northeastern
Colombia last week were on a mission to help preserve the cultural identity of an Indian group, co-workers and
relatives said Monday.
The three Americans, seized Thursday 200 miles from Bogota by armed men in civilian clothing, had spent a week on
the U'wa reservation under the auspices of the Hawaii-based Pacific Cultural Conservancy International.
``Their sole mission in Colombia was to learn the conditions and needs of their host, the U'wa people,'' relatives said
in a fax received by The Associated Press.
Larry Brown, the conservation group's manager, said the three were studying the U'wa, who live in remote jungles
near the Venezuelan border, to determine whether they might be able to assist them.
``Our types of programs are designed to preserve the cultural integrity of indigenous people - and they are typically
educational in nature,'' Brown said by telephone from Hawaii.
Seized were the group's director, 39-year-old Lahe'ena'e Gay along with Ingrid Washinawatok, 41, a Menominee
Indian from Wisconsin, and Terence Freitas, a 24-year-old environmentalist who has worked extensively with the
U'wa.
No group claimed responsibility for the abduction, but several leftist rebel bands operate in the area where the three
were seized.
In Washington, State Department spokesman James Foley said the U.S. Embassy in Bogota was ``working
vigorously with Colombian authorities to secure their immediate and safe release.''
Foley also reiterated a State Department warning against unnecessary travel in Colombia because of the threat of
kidnapping and murder of Americans.
A U'wa representative who was with the Americans when they were seized, Roberto Afanador, said he suspected the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, the country's oldest and largest rebel group. Afanador said the
FARC frequently enters the U'Wa reserve without permission.
``They came to study our culture, our territory,'' said Afanador. ``The indigenous authorities are very upset by this
because our territory is not respected. We are humiliated. We are abused.''
The U'wa, a fiercely proud nation of some 8,000 people, won a legal battle against Occidental Petroleum in 1997 that
prevented the Los Angeles-based company from exploratory drilling on traditional U'wa territory.
�
***********************************
>From Alt.Native:
Just in from World News:
" The three Americans kidnapped by suspected leftist rebels in remote
northeastern Colombia last week were on a mission to help preserve the cultural
identity of an Indian group, co-workers and relatives said Monday.
�
� The three Americans, seized Thursday 200 miles from Bogota by armed men in
civilian clothing, had spent a week on the U'wa reservation under the auspices
of the Hawaii based Pacific Cultural Conservancy International.
�
� Seized were the group's directror, 39 year old Lahe'ena'e Gay along with
Ingrid Washinawatok, 41, a Menominee Indian from Wisconsin, and Terence
Freitas, a 24 year old environmentalist who has worked extensively with the
U'wa.
�
� A tribal member also was captured.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
COLOMBIA SUPPORT NETWORK just received the following information from the
Native American Council of New York : that INGRID WASHINAWATOK , a member
of the Menomonie Nation of Wisconsin and a representative of the United
Nations International Working Group on Indigenous Rights, was kidnapped on
February 25th at 10 p.m. in the morning by FARC� guerrillas when she was on
her way to visit the indigenous U'Wa Community in Colombia. FARC� has
acknowledged the kidnapping in a fax sent to the United States Embassy in
Bogota. This is all the available information that Colombia Support Network
has at this moment on Friday, February 26th at 6:20 p.m. Central Standard
Time. Any further information will be immediately released.
COLOMBIA SUPPORT NETWORK strongly protests this outrageous violation� of
this individual's human rights and demands her immediate release.
> should you wish to voice your outrage:
Please send faxes to :
ANDRES PASTRANA ARANGO
Presidente de la Rep�blica
Kra.8 n.7-26� Santa Fe de Bogot�
Tlf: 571/ 284 33 00�� Fax: 571/ 286 74 34 - 286 79 37 - 284 21 86
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MONSIGNOR ALBERTO GIRALDO
Presidente Conferencia Episcopal
Carrera 47 # 84 - 85
Santafe de Bogota
Fax : 011 57 1 311 5058
Colombia Support Network
P.O. Box 1505
Madison, WI 53701
(608) 257-8753�� fax (608) 255-6621
[EMAIL PROTECTED]��� http://www.igc.apc.org/csn/
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http://abcnews.go.com/sections/world/DailyNews/colombia990305.html
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Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
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